Abstract

Abstract. The Öresund (the Sound), which is a part of the Danish straits, is linking the marine North Sea and the brackish Baltic Sea. It is a transition zone where ecosystems are subjected to large gradients in terms of salinity, temperature, carbonate chemistry, and dissolved oxygen concentration. In addition to the highly variable environmental conditions, the area is responding to anthropogenic disturbances in, e.g., nutrient loading, temperature, and pH. We have reconstructed environmental changes in the Öresund during the last ca. 200 years, and especially dissolved oxygen concentration, salinity, organic matter content, and pollution levels, using benthic foraminifera and sediment geochemistry. Five zones with characteristic foraminiferal assemblages were identified, each reflecting the environmental conditions for the respective period. The largest changes occurred around 1950, when the foraminiferal assemblage shifted from a low diversity fauna dominated by the species Stainforthia fusiformis to higher diversity and abundance and dominance of the Elphidium species. Concurrently, the grain-size distribution shifted from clayey to sandier sediment. To explore the causes of the environmental changes, we used time series of reconstructed wind conditions coupled with large-scale climate variations as recorded by the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) index as well as the ECOSMO II model of currents in the Öresund area. The results indicate increased changes in the water circulation towards stronger currents in the area after the 1950s. The foraminiferal fauna responded quickly (<10 years) to the environmental changes. Notably, when the wind conditions, and thereby the current system, returned in the 1980s to the previous pattern, the foraminiferal assemblage did not rebound. Instead, the foraminiferal faunas displayed a new equilibrium state.

Highlights

  • The Öresund is one part of the Danish straits between Sweden and Denmark

  • The region is characterized by intense human activities, with 4 million people living in the vicinity of the Öresund and 85 million people living in the catchment area of the Baltic Sea (HELCOM, 2009)

  • The salinity was probably not below ∼ 30, which is the lower limit for N. labradorica and S. fusiformis, which were present throughout the period (Fig. 5, Table 2)

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Summary

Introduction

The Öresund (the Sound) is one part of the Danish straits between Sweden and Denmark. The depth of the halocline mainly depends of the outflows from the Baltic Sea; a strong thermocline develops during spring and summer, which further strengthens the vertical stratification. The region is characterized by intense human activities, with 4 million people living in the vicinity of the Öresund and 85 million people living in the catchment area of the Baltic Sea (HELCOM, 2009). Discharge from agriculture, industry, and urban areas on both the Swedish and Danish sides of the strait and the considerable impact of marine traffic – the strait is one of the busiest waterways in the world – generate pollution and eutrophication of the water (HELCOM, 2009; ICES 2010). Since the 1980s, the implementation of efficient wastewater treatment and measures in agriculture contributed to markedly reducing the amount of nutrients

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