Abstract
Coastal basins are particularly exposed to the adverse impact of anthropogenic stress. In many places, despite only the seasonal increase in the number of residents, progressive urbanization and associated changes in the catchment characteristics are noticeable. Puck Bay is part of the Gulf of Gdansk and belongs to the Baltic Sea. Although the area of Puck Bay is covered by the Natura 2000 Network, this has not saved it from eutrophication problems. As part of the work on a complex coastal basin analysis (WaterPUCK project), the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) model was used to determine the agricultural impact on water quality in rivers with a flow into Puck Bay: Reda, Gizdepka, Płutnica, and Błądzikowski Stream. The results include the loads of nutrients and pesticides that flow out from the agricultural areas of Puck community into Puck Bay. In this article, special attention has been paid to the impact of precipitation on the quality of water at the outflow of rivers into the Bay of Puck, because it is a decisive element in the amount of nutrients leached along with surface runoff to watercourses and then into the Gulf. The distribution of precipitation thus affects the amount of nutrients absorbed by plants. Modeling the effects of agricultural practices, taking into account long-term meteorological forecasts, is helpful in attempts to reduce the amount of pollutants entering the Baltic Sea.
Highlights
The Baltic Sea region is the subject of many studies
The model shows the presence of pesticides in surface runoff, flowing through the rivers and the Bay of Puck to the Baltic Sea
The compounds washed away with surface runoff can be dissolved in water and transported to watercourses and to the Baltic Sea
Summary
The Baltic Sea region is the subject of many studies. In the 1990s, large-scale changes in the Baltic. Due to the commencement of activities aimed at protecting the Baltic Sea [3], at the end of the 20th century a gradual decrease in the amount of fertilizers applied to arable fields began to be observed this applies to the dosing of both nitrogen and phosphorus [1,4]. This has resulted in a slow downward trend in the amount of nitrogen and phosphorus supplied from countries neighboring the Baltic Sea [5]. Simulations of the future of this reservoir are more and more often being carried out [8]
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