dc.description.abstract | Quantitative estimates of the fluxes and dynamics
in the nutrient load on marine environments, their
distribution and channelling through the food web
and the effect on the increase of new production,
are fundamental and constitute a prerequisite for
the planning of actions for water protection measures.
The Gulf of Riga is no exception. The Gulf
is a semi-enclosed part of the eastern Baltic Sea,
surrounded by Estonia and Latvia and has one
major outlet, the Irbe Straight Sound, and one minor
one, the Muhu Sound. The Gulf of Riga has a
surface area of 19,000 km2, is up to 67 m deep, has
a relatively simple topography and a volume of 420
km3 (Figure 19.1). The Gulf is eutrophicated and
most of the pollution loads in the Gulf can be attributed
to human activities in the drainage basin,
which covers 135,700 km2, or more than seven
times the surface area of the Gulf itself. In pelagic
environments the fate of organic matter produced
by an increased supply of nutrients, the regulation
of vertical flux and in particular the pelagicbenthic
coupling are not well known in general,
let alone in the Gulf of Riga. Since the beginning
of this century Estonian, Latvian, Lithuanian and
Russian scientists have already carried out a substantial
body of work in various disciplines in the
Gulf of Riga and its drainage area (summarised
by Ojaveer 1995). From 1993–1997 Nordic and
Baltic scientists joined forces in an international
project, the ‘Environmental Research in the Baltic
Sea’, also referred to as the ‘Gulf of Riga Project’
(GoR). The objective was to study environmental
problems in the Gulf and its drainage area, and to
determine their impact on the rest of the Baltic
Sea in general and the Baltic Proper in particular
(Figure 19.2).
The investigations reviewed here aim at to understand
the Gulf of Riga as an ecosystem by
analysing
1. the dynamics of the runoff of nutrients and
their supply to the Gulf,
2. the distribution of nutrients in the Gulf,
3. the production and distribution of plankton
and organic matter and
4. the processes involved in settling and the vertical
export of organic matter.
This chapter rests upon 14 publications from
the project ‘Pelagic eutrophication and sedimentation’
(Wassmann & Tamminen, 1999); see also
J. Mar. Syst, Vol 23. | en |