Abstract

The Baltic Sea, one of the largest brackish water areas in the world, can be characterized as a young, cold sea containing an impoverished ecosystem due to salinity stress. The present Baltic Sea was formed as late as 2000 to 2500 years ago when the Danish sounds became more narrow and shallow. The inflow of freshwater from the surrounding land areas caused the Baltic to gradually attain its brackish character. Today the Baltic covers an area of some 366,000 km2 as a series of basins separated by shallower areas and filled with about 22,000 km3 of brackish water. These basins are, from north to south, the Gulf of Bothnia, the Gulf of Finland, the Gotland Sea and the Bornholm Sea. The climate gradient ranges from almost arctic conditions in the extreme north to a more maritime climate in the southern parts. The North Sea salt water is connected to the Baltic through the shallow Kattegat and the sills in the Danish sounds. The inflow of salt water occurs in two different ways,viz. as a continuous flow along the bottom due to the salinity gradient and as pulses of salt water generated by the distribution of air pressure and the direction of the wind. The freshwater input (500 km3) from mainly the large rivers equals roughly the net outflow and stresses the south-bound current along the Swedish coast that also compensates for the salt water inflow. Tidal movements can be seen in the southern Baltic, but are of minor importance for the system. The residence time of the total water mass is 25 years and the hydrographical conditions within the different basins are stable and dominated by a permanent halocline, and a thermocline developing every spring. The salinity ranges from about 1–2 per mille in the innermost part of the Gulf of Bothnia to 10–15 per mille in the Bornholm Sea. Total vertical mixing takes place during winter in at least the northern parts of the sea. Due to the climate-gradient, the ice condition differs from about four months of total ice-cover in the inner parts of the Gulf of Bothnia to one month or less of coastal ice in the southern part of the Baltic. Thus, the seasonal effect is more pronounced in the northern parts.

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