| Literature DB >> 24414805 |
Aarno T Kotilainen1, Laura Arppe, Slawomir Dobosz, Eystein Jansen, Karoline Kabel, Juha Karhu, Mia M Kotilainen, Antoon Kuijpers, Bryan C Lougheed, H E Markus Meier, Matthias Moros, Thomas Neumann, Christian Porsche, Niels Poulsen, Peter Rasmussen, Sofia Ribeiro, Bjørg Risebrobakken, Daria Ryabchuk, Semjon Schimanke, Ian Snowball, Mikhail Spiridonov, Joonas J Virtasalo, Kaarina Weckström, Andrzej Witkowski, Vladimir Zhamoida.
Abstract
Integrated sediment multiproxy studies and modeling were used to reconstruct past changes in the Baltic Sea ecosystem. Results of natural changes over the past 6000 years in the Baltic Sea ecosystem suggest that forecasted climate warming might enhance environmental problems of the Baltic Sea. Integrated modeling and sediment proxy studies reveal increased sea surface temperatures and expanded seafloor anoxia (in deep basins) during earlier natural warm climate phases, such as the Medieval Climate Anomaly. Under future IPCC scenarios of global warming, there is likely no improvement of bottom water conditions in the Baltic Sea. Thus, the measures already designed to produce a healthier Baltic Sea are insufficient in the long term. The interactions between climate change and anthropogenic impacts on the Baltic Sea should be considered in management, implementation of policy strategies in the Baltic Sea environmental issues, and adaptation to future climate change.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24414805 PMCID: PMC3888658 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-013-0477-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
Fig. 1The Baltic Sea in Northern Europe. a Subregions of the Baltic Sea. b Key sites studied in the BONUS INFLOW project. Sediment core id numbers are shown in the figure. Detailed information on coring locations and water depths are shown in Table 1. The bathymetric map of the Baltic Sea is a product of the BALANCE “Baltic Sea Management – Nature Conservation and Sustainable Development of the Ecosystem through Spatial Planning” Interreg IIIB EU-project (modified from Kotilainen 2012)
Key sites studied in the INFLOW project. Sea area, sediment core ID number, coordinates (WGS 84), water depth (in m), recovery (the length of sediment core in cm), and research vessel are shown for each site. Additional information is available in Kotilainen et al. (2012b)
| Sea area | Core ID | Latitide (N) | Longitude (E) | Water depth (M) | Recovery (cm) | Research vessel |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Skagerrak | 372610 | 57°41.05 | 06°41.00 | 320 | 550 | Maria S. Merian |
| Skagerrak | 242940 | 57°40.520 | 07°10.000 | 316 | 890 | Poseidon |
| Skagerrak | 372650 | 58°29.76 | 09°35.91 | 550 | 530 | Maria S. Merian |
| Kattegat | 367270 | 56°41.282 | 11°46.679 | 41 | 379.5 | Prof. Albrecht Penck |
| Mecklenburg Bay | 317970 | 54°12.011 | 11°21.010 | 23 | 758 | Maria S. Merian |
| Mecklenburg Bay | 317990 | 54°18.596 | 11°25.571 | 23 | 865 | Maria S. Merian |
| Arkona Basin | 318340-3 | 54°54.765 | 13°41.444 | 47 | 1104 | Maria S. Merian |
| Bornholm Basin | 371080 | 55°20.37 | 15°26.76 | 93 | 380 | Prof. Albrecht Penck |
| Gotland Basin | 303600-3 | 56°55.01 | 19°20.01 | 170 | 820 | Poseidon |
| Gotland Basin | 370530-5 | 57°23.123 | 20°15.489 | 231 | 498 | Aranda |
| Gotland Basin | 370540-6 | 57°17.011 | 20°07.248 | 243 | 650 | Aranda |
| Northern Central Basin (NCB) | 370520-6 | 58°53.657 | 20°34.419 | 182 | 480 | Aranda |
| Western Gulf of Finland (JML) | 370510-5 | 59°34.907 | 23°37.572 | 80 | 557 | Aranda |
| Eastern Gulf of Finland (F40) | MGML-2009-5 | 60°06.409 | 28°47.518 | 38 | 454 | Aranda |
Fig. 2a TEX86 (biomarker) reconstructed SSTs (°C) (red curve) from the Baltic Sea (Gotland Deep) sediment core, over the last 150 years. Anoxic periods at seafloor can be seen in sediment photograph (b) as laminated structures, and more oxic conditions as homogeneous structures. c Oxygen concentrations as simulated with an ecosystem model for the MWP (upper), for the LIA with historical (preindustrial) nutrient input (bottom left), and for the LIA with modern nutrient input (bottom right). Figure is modified after Kabel et al. (2012)
Fig. 3X-ray intensity image of a sediment core from the Gotland Deep, Baltic Sea (left); manganese concentration (blue curve), number of benthic foraminifera (tests/g) (black curve), organic carbon (%) content (green curve), and photograph. Also indicated: MWP, LIA, and MCA, as well as the estimated frequency and strength of the saline water inflows. The presence of benthic foraminifers indicate saline water inflows