Ecology:Baltic Sea
Baltic Sea coast in western Estonia. @ C.Michael Hogan
Published: March 30, 2010, 12:00 am
Updated: May 15, 2013, 10:50 pm
This article has been reviewed by the following Topic Editors:
C Michael Hogan,
Raphael D. Sagarin
The Baltic Sea is situated between Scandinavia and mainland Europe, and extends into the North Sea. The sea is split into several smaller basins termed the Gulf of Bothnia, the Aland Sea (located in the southern part of the Gulf of Bothnia), the Gulf of Finland, the Gulf of Riga, Kattegat, and Skagerrak.
Countries that border the Baltic Sea to the north are Norway, Sweden and Finland. Russia. Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania border the east. The south is bordered by Poland, Germany, and Denmark. The western arm of the Baltic Sea flows into the North Sea.
Figure 1. Map of Baltic Sea. Source: Norman Einstein
Physical Characteristics
The Baltic Sea is essentially a very large fjord covering an area of 415,266 km2, with topography varying orderly from shallow areas (about 17% is less than ten metres deep) to deep basins with depths up to 459 m (Landsort Deep). The average depth is 53 m and the average volume 21,547 km³. It is approximately 1500 km long and has an average width of about 230 km.
A dilution basin type of Mediterranean sea, the Baltic Sea is connected to and experiences limited, intermittent water exchange with the North Sea.
The annual fresh water river runoff into the Baltic Sea is about two percent of the total water volume of the Sea (greatest in May and least in January and February), draining an area nearly four times the size of the sea (1.7 million km2). A shallow and narrow connection with the North Sea means that water remains in the Baltic Sea for about 30 years. These two factors combine to make the Baltic Sea one of the largest brackish water bodies in the world, with a salinity that ranges from 1-2 parts per thousand in the far north and east to about 20 parts per thousand in the Kattegat near the North Sea. In contrast, fresh water has a salinity of of less than 0.5 parts per thousand, and an typical oceanic sea water more than 30 parts per thousand. A saline stratification layer (known as a halocline) exists at a depth of around 70 m.
The different regions of the Baltic Sea are summarized in Table 1 and illustrated in Figure 2.
|
Sub-Region
|
Surface area
(km2)
|
Volume (km3)
|
Salinity
(parts per thousand)
|
Maximum Depth
(m)
|
Average Depth
(m)
|
|
Baltic Proper
|
211,069
|
13,045
|
5-10
|
459
|
62.1
|
|
Gulf of Bothnia
|
115,516
|
6,389
|
0-7
|
230
|
60.2
|
|
Gulf of Finland
|
29,600
|
1,100
|
0-7
|
123
|
38
|
|
Gulf of Riga
|
16,330
|
424
|
6-10
|
>60
|
26
|
|
Danish Straits and Kattegat
|
42,408
|
802
|
8-32
|
109
|
18.9
|
|
Total
|
415,266
|
21,721
|
0-32
|
459
|
52.3
|
|
Table 1. Physical characteristics of different regions of the Baltic Sea. Source: Towards marine landscapes in the Baltic Sea (BALANCE interim report N. 10) |
Figure 2. Sub-regions of the Baltic Sea. Source: Helsinki Commission
The circulation in the Baltic Sea is driven by three chief forces:
-
Wind stress;
-
Horizontal density differences due to freshwater inflow from rivers and saline water inflow via the Danish Straits; and
-
Sea level inclination from the Danish Straits towards the interior.
On average, sea level rises about 25 cm from the Danish Straits towards the Gulf of Bothnia due to the river runoff.
If not interrupted by wind–driven currents, a continuous inflow of saline water from the Skagerrak forms the deep water of the Baltic. It is estimated that 740 km3 of saline water enters the Baltic per year. The inflow enters through the Great Belt (65%), the Sound (25%) and the Little Belt (10%). After passing through these, the saline water passes over the shallow Darss Sill (18 m), crosses the Arkona basin, flows through Bornholm Strait into the Bornholm Basin, and finally flows through Stolpe Channel into the Gotland Basin.
Human settlement
Over 85 million people live in the catchment area of the Baltic Sea, 15 million within 10 km of the coast.
Several islands are found within the Baltic Sea. Some major islands are are (alphabetically): Åland Islands (independent nation), Bornholm (Denmark), Gotland (Sweden), Öland (Sweden), Saaremaa and Hiiumaa (Estonia), and Zeeland and Funen (Denmark).
Important cities along the Baltic include:
-
The Russian cities of St. Petersburg and Kaliningrad
-
Stockholm, capital of Sweden
-
Copenhagen, capital of Denmark
-
Oslo, capital of Norway
-
Helsinki, capital of Finland
-
Tallinn, capital of Estonia
-
Riga, capital of Latvia
Helsinki Convention
In 1974, the then seven Baltic coastal states, signed a treaty to address pollution on a comprehensive basis. This convention entered into force on 3 May 1980. Following the end of the Soviet Union and the establish of several new states bordering the Baltic Sea, a new treaty was signed in 1992 among 10 parties: Denmark, Estonia, European Community, Finland, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Russia and Sweden. The new convention entered into force on 17 January 2000. The governing body of the Convention is the Helsinki Commission - Baltic Marine Environment Protection Commission - also known as HELCOM.
The goal of the Convention is for "The Contracting Parties shall individually or jointly take all appropriate legislative, administrative or other relevant measures to prevent and eliminate pollution in order to promote the ecological restoration of the Baltic Sea Area and the preservation of its ecological balance." In addition to contracting parties agreed to: apply the precautionary principle, promote the use of Best Environmental Practice and Best Available Technology, apply the polluter-pays principle, ensure that measurements and calculations of emissions from point sources to water and air and of inputs from diffuse sources to water and air are carried out in a scientifically appropriate manner, and ensure that the implementation of the Convention does not cause transboundary pollution in areas outside the Baltic Sea Area.
Eutrophication
The Baltic Sea suffers from many consequences as a result of eutrophication, an excess of nutrients such as nitrogen, and phosphorus, which cause increased growth of algae and plants.
Because sinificant flows of water do not enter into or efflux out of the Baltic Sea (due to the low level of water exchange with the North Sea) or within the Baltic Sea (due to vertical stratification of water with different levels of salinity), the Baltic Sea is sensitive to oxygen depletion when algae and plant make greater demands on dissolved oxygen.
Nutrients enter the Baltic Sea via deposition from the atmosphere, rivers flowing into the Sea, and direct discharge. Because of atmospheric deposition, nutrient sources extend beyond the catchment area of rivers feeding into the Baltic Sea.
A large number of human activities and natural flows are the ultimate sources of the nutrients. The helsink Commission notes the following:
-
atmospheric emissions of airborne nitrogen compounds emitted from traffic or combustion of fossil fuels (heat and power generation), and from animal manure and husbandry, etc.;
-
point sources including inputs from municipalities, industries and fish-farms both discharging into inland surface waters and directly into the Baltic sea;
-
diffuse sources, which mainly originate from agriculture, but also include nutrient losses from e.g. managed forestry and urban areas;
-
and natural background sources, mainly referring to natural erosion and leakage from unmanaged areas and the corresponding nutrient losses from e.g. agricultural and managed forested land that would occur irrespective of human activities.
It is estimated that in 2000, just over one million tonnes of nitrogen and over one-third of a million tonnes of phosphorus entered in the Baltic Sea. Three quarters of the nitrogen was waterborne, of which 60% came from agricultural activities, 28% from natural sources, and the rest from point sources. Nearly all phosphorus entering the Baltic Sea is waterborne, with half of it originating in agriculture forestry. Natural sources of phosphorus contributed about a quarter of the total. Thus, human activities increase the natural inflows of nitrogen and phosphorus over three-fold. As a result,
These increased concentrations will generally cause an increase in phytoplankton primary production and the growth of short-lived macroalgae. An increase in phytoplankton biomass will cause turbidity in the water and thus a decrease in light penetration through the water column which can ultimately reduce the colonization depth of macroalgae and seagrasses. In association with these changes, there may be changes in the dominance of various species groups. The increase in phytoplankton biomass will ultimately also increase the sedimentation of organic matter to the seabed. The decomposition of this sedimented organic matter may cause oxygen depletion in the sediments and bottom water, resulting in the loss of benthic animals and fish. (Eutrophication in the Baltic Sea - see Further Reading below)
Problems associated with eutrophication are not uniform in the Baltic Sea, but are most pronounced in
-
Baltic Proper, Eastern Gotland Basin;
-
Gulf of Gdansk;
-
Baltic Proper, northern parts;
-
Western Gotland Basin; and,
-
Kiel Bight and Mecklenburg Bight
The challenge of eutrophication is one being addressed by the Helsinki Convention and reductions in nutrients flows from most Baltic Sea countries have been achieved in decent years.
Hazardous Substances
While significant progress has been made in reducing the levels of pollutants entering the Baltic Sea in recent decades, elevated levels of heavy metals such as mercury, cadmium, lead, copper and zinc, and persistent organic pollutants (POPs) such as dioxins exist. Many of these pollutants persist despite significant regulatory efforts (for example, persistent organic pollutants were banned in the 1980s) and are found in marine life such as fish like herring and salmon.
Biodiversity
The Baltic Sea has limited biodiversity due to a number of factors illustrated in Figure 3.
Figure 3. Specific features and processes which make the Baltic Sea sensitive and limit its biodiversity. Green boxes are natural characteristics, white boxes are human impacts, and yellow boxes are harmful effects). Source: Helsinki Commission
Three seal species breed in the Baltic Sea are the Grey seal, the Common seal, and the Baltic ringed seal
Further Reading
-
Physical Oceanography Index
-
Seas of the world on the Encyclopedia of Earth
-
The Baltic Sea: Its Past, Present and Future, Jan Thulin and Andris Andrushaitis, Religion, Science and the Environment Symposium V on the Baltic Sea (2003).
-
Helsinki Commission
-
Helsinki Convention
-
HELCOM 2009 Eutrophication in the Baltic Sea – An integrated thematic assessment of the effects of nutrient enrichment and eutrophication in the Baltic Sea region: Executive Summary. Balt. Sea Environ. Proc. No. 115A.
-
Sven G. Segerstrale. Baltic sea. In J. W. Hedgpeth, editor, Treatise of Marine Ecology and Paleoecology. Vol. 1: Ecology, pages 751–800. Geological Society of America, 1957.
-
L. Zenkevitch. Biology of the Seas of the U.S.S.R. Wiley Interscience, 1963.
-
J. Rodhe. The Baltic and North Seas: A process–oriented review of the physical oceanography. In A. R. Robinson and K. Brink, editors, The Sea, Vol. 11, pages 699–732. Wiley, 1998.
-
A. Stigebrandt. Physical oceanography of the Baltic Sea. In F. Wulff, L. Rahm, and P. Larsson, editors, Ecological Studies: Large–Scale Environmental Effects and Ecological Processes in the Baltic Sea, Springer–Verlag, 1999.
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Citation
Peter Saundry (Lead Author);Tim Bransford (Contributing Author);C Michael Hogan, Raphael D. Sagarin (Topic Editor) "Baltic Sea". In: Encyclopedia of Earth. Eds. Cutler J. Cleveland (Washington, D.C.: Environmental Information Coalition, National Council for Science and the Environment). [First published in the Encyclopedia of Earth March 30, 2010; Last revised Date May 15, 2013; Retrieved May 24, 2013 <http://www.eoearth.org/article/Baltic_Sea?topic=49461>
The Author
Stewardship Committee
The Encyclopedia of Earth
Dr. Peter Saundry is the Executive Director of the National Council for Science and the Environment (NCSE), a nonpartisan organization working to improve the scientific basis of environmental decision making. The NCSE works closely with the many communities that create and use environmental knowledge to make and shape environmental decisions, including academic, scientific, environmental, and business organizations, as well as federal, state ... (Full Bio)
The Baltic Sea is situated between Scandinavia and mainland Europe, and extends into the North Sea. The sea is split into several smaller basins termed the Gulf of Bothnia, the Aland Sea (located in the southern part of the Gulf of Bothnia), the Gulf of Finland, the Gulf of Riga, Kattegat, and Skagerrak.
Countries that border the Baltic Sea to the north are Norway, Sweden and Finland. Russia. Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania border the east. The south is bordered by Poland, Germany, and Denmark. The western arm of the Baltic Sea flows into the North Sea.
Figure 1. Map of Baltic Sea. Source: Norman Einstein
Physical Characteristics
The Baltic Sea is essentially a very large fjord covering an area of 415,266 km2, with topography varying orderly from shallow areas (about 17% is less than ten metres deep) to deep basins with depths up to 459 m (Landsort Deep). The average depth is 53 m and the average volume 21,547 km³. It is approximately 1500 km long and has an average width of about 230 km.
A dilution basin type of Mediterranean sea, the Baltic Sea is connected to and experiences limited, intermittent water exchange with the North Sea.
The annual fresh water river runoff into the Baltic Sea is about two percent of the total water volume of the Sea (greatest in May and least in January and February), draining an area nearly four times the size of the sea (1.7 million km2). A shallow and narrow connection with the North Sea means that water remains in the Baltic Sea for about 30 years. These two factors combine to make the Baltic Sea one of the largest brackish water bodies in the world, with a salinity that ranges from 1-2 parts per thousand in the far north and east to about 20 parts per thousand in the Kattegat near the North Sea. In contrast, fresh water has a salinity of of less than 0.5 parts per thousand, and an typical oceanic sea water more than 30 parts per thousand. A saline stratification layer (known as a halocline) exists at a depth of around 70 m.
The different regions of the Baltic Sea are summarized in Table 1 and illustrated in Figure 2.
|
Sub-Region
|
Surface area
(km2)
|
Volume (km3)
|
Salinity
(parts per thousand)
|
Maximum Depth
(m)
|
Average Depth
(m)
|
|
Baltic Proper
|
211,069
|
13,045
|
5-10
|
459
|
62.1
|
|
Gulf of Bothnia
|
115,516
|
6,389
|
0-7
|
230
|
60.2
|
|
Gulf of Finland
|
29,600
|
1,100
|
0-7
|
123
|
38
|
|
Gulf of Riga
|
16,330
|
424
|
6-10
|
>60
|
26
|
|
Danish Straits and Kattegat
|
42,408
|
802
|
8-32
|
109
|
18.9
|
|
Total
|
415,266
|
21,721
|
0-32
|
459
|
52.3
|
|
Table 1. Physical characteristics of different regions of the Baltic Sea. Source: Towards marine landscapes in the Baltic Sea (BALANCE interim report N. 10) |
Figure 2. Sub-regions of the Baltic Sea. Source: Helsinki Commission
The circulation in the Baltic Sea is driven by three chief forces:
-
Wind stress;
-
Horizontal density differences due to freshwater inflow from rivers and saline water inflow via the Danish Straits; and
-
Sea level inclination from the Danish Straits towards the interior.
On average, sea level rises about 25 cm from the Danish Straits towards the Gulf of Bothnia due to the river runoff.
If not interrupted by wind–driven currents, a continuous inflow of saline water from the Skagerrak forms the deep water of the Baltic. It is estimated that 740 km3 of saline water enters the Baltic per year. The inflow enters through the Great Belt (65%), the Sound (25%) and the Little Belt (10%). After passing through these, the saline water passes over the shallow Darss Sill (18 m), crosses the Arkona basin, flows through Bornholm Strait into the Bornholm Basin, and finally flows through Stolpe Channel into the Gotland Basin.
Human settlement
Over 85 million people live in the catchment area of the Baltic Sea, 15 million within 10 km of the coast.
Several islands are found within the Baltic Sea. Some major islands are are (alphabetically): Åland Islands (independent nation), Bornholm (Denmark), Gotland (Sweden), Öland (Sweden), Saaremaa and Hiiumaa (Estonia), and Zeeland and Funen (Denmark).
Important cities along the Baltic include:
-
The Russian cities of St. Petersburg and Kaliningrad
-
Stockholm, capital of Sweden
-
Copenhagen, capital of Denmark
-
Oslo, capital of Norway
-
Helsinki, capital of Finland
-
Tallinn, capital of Estonia
-
Riga, capital of Latvia
Helsinki Convention
In 1974, the then seven Baltic coastal states, signed a treaty to address pollution on a comprehensive basis. This convention entered into force on 3 May 1980. Following the end of the Soviet Union and the establish of several new states bordering the Baltic Sea, a new treaty was signed in 1992 among 10 parties: Denmark, Estonia, European Community, Finland, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Russia and Sweden. The new convention entered into force on 17 January 2000. The governing body of the Convention is the Helsinki Commission - Baltic Marine Environment Protection Commission - also known as HELCOM.
The goal of the Convention is for "The Contracting Parties shall individually or jointly take all appropriate legislative, administrative or other relevant measures to prevent and eliminate pollution in order to promote the ecological restoration of the Baltic Sea Area and the preservation of its ecological balance." In addition to contracting parties agreed to: apply the precautionary principle, promote the use of Best Environmental Practice and Best Available Technology, apply the polluter-pays principle, ensure that measurements and calculations of emissions from point sources to water and air and of inputs from diffuse sources to water and air are carried out in a scientifically appropriate manner, and ensure that the implementation of the Convention does not cause transboundary pollution in areas outside the Baltic Sea Area.
Eutrophication
The Baltic Sea suffers from many consequences as a result of eutrophication, an excess of nutrients such as nitrogen, and phosphorus, which cause increased growth of algae and plants.
Because sinificant flows of water do not enter into or efflux out of the Baltic Sea (due to the low level of water exchange with the North Sea) or within the Baltic Sea (due to vertical stratification of water with different levels of salinity), the Baltic Sea is sensitive to oxygen depletion when algae and plant make greater demands on dissolved oxygen.
Nutrients enter the Baltic Sea via deposition from the atmosphere, rivers flowing into the Sea, and direct discharge. Because of atmospheric deposition, nutrient sources extend beyond the catchment area of rivers feeding into the Baltic Sea.
A large number of human activities and natural flows are the ultimate sources of the nutrients. The helsink Commission notes the following:
-
atmospheric emissions of airborne nitrogen compounds emitted from traffic or combustion of fossil fuels (heat and power generation), and from animal manure and husbandry, etc.;
-
point sources including inputs from municipalities, industries and fish-farms both discharging into inland surface waters and directly into the Baltic sea;
-
diffuse sources, which mainly originate from agriculture, but also include nutrient losses from e.g. managed forestry and urban areas;
-
and natural background sources, mainly referring to natural erosion and leakage from unmanaged areas and the corresponding nutrient losses from e.g. agricultural and managed forested land that would occur irrespective of human activities.
It is estimated that in 2000, just over one million tonnes of nitrogen and over one-third of a million tonnes of phosphorus entered in the Baltic Sea. Three quarters of the nitrogen was waterborne, of which 60% came from agricultural activities, 28% from natural sources, and the rest from point sources. Nearly all phosphorus entering the Baltic Sea is waterborne, with half of it originating in agriculture forestry. Natural sources of phosphorus contributed about a quarter of the total. Thus, human activities increase the natural inflows of nitrogen and phosphorus over three-fold. As a result,
These increased concentrations will generally cause an increase in phytoplankton primary production and the growth of short-lived macroalgae. An increase in phytoplankton biomass will cause turbidity in the water and thus a decrease in light penetration through the water column which can ultimately reduce the colonization depth of macroalgae and seagrasses. In association with these changes, there may be changes in the dominance of various species groups. The increase in phytoplankton biomass will ultimately also increase the sedimentation of organic matter to the seabed. The decomposition of this sedimented organic matter may cause oxygen depletion in the sediments and bottom water, resulting in the loss of benthic animals and fish. (Eutrophication in the Baltic Sea - see Further Reading below)
Problems associated with eutrophication are not uniform in the Baltic Sea, but are most pronounced in
-
Baltic Proper, Eastern Gotland Basin;
-
Gulf of Gdansk;
-
Baltic Proper, northern parts;
-
Western Gotland Basin; and,
-
Kiel Bight and Mecklenburg Bight
The challenge of eutrophication is one being addressed by the Helsinki Convention and reductions in nutrients flows from most Baltic Sea countries have been achieved in decent years.
Hazardous Substances
While significant progress has been made in reducing the levels of pollutants entering the Baltic Sea in recent decades, elevated levels of heavy metals such as mercury, cadmium, lead, copper and zinc, and persistent organic pollutants (POPs) such as dioxins exist. Many of these pollutants persist despite significant regulatory efforts (for example, persistent organic pollutants were banned in the 1980s) and are found in marine life such as fish like herring and salmon.
Biodiversity
The Baltic Sea has limited biodiversity due to a number of factors illustrated in Figure 3.
Figure 3. Specific features and processes which make the Baltic Sea sensitive and limit its biodiversity. Green boxes are natural characteristics, white boxes are human impacts, and yellow boxes are harmful effects). Source: Helsinki Commission
Three seal species breed in the Baltic Sea are the Grey seal, the Common seal, and the Baltic ringed seal
Further Reading
-
Physical Oceanography Index
-
Seas of the world on the Encyclopedia of Earth
-
The Baltic Sea: Its Past, Present and Future, Jan Thulin and Andris Andrushaitis, Religion, Science and the Environment Symposium V on the Baltic Sea (2003).
-
Helsinki Commission
-
Helsinki Convention
-
HELCOM 2009 Eutrophication in the Baltic Sea – An integrated thematic assessment of the effects of nutrient enrichment and eutrophication in the Baltic Sea region: Executive Summary. Balt. Sea Environ. Proc. No. 115A.
-
Sven G. Segerstrale. Baltic sea. In J. W. Hedgpeth, editor, Treatise of Marine Ecology and Paleoecology. Vol. 1: Ecology, pages 751–800. Geological Society of America, 1957.
-
L. Zenkevitch. Biology of the Seas of the U.S.S.R. Wiley Interscience, 1963.
-
J. Rodhe. The Baltic and North Seas: A process–oriented review of the physical oceanography. In A. R. Robinson and K. Brink, editors, The Sea, Vol. 11, pages 699–732. Wiley, 1998.
-
A. Stigebrandt. Physical oceanography of the Baltic Sea. In F. Wulff, L. Rahm, and P. Larsson, editors, Ecological Studies: Large–Scale Environmental Effects and Ecological Processes in the Baltic Sea, Springer–Verlag, 1999.
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