Findings from a long-term study of the Baltic Sea reveal possible answers to issues of intense worldwide concern As one of the best-investigated seas in the world for more than a century, the Baltic Sea has been subject to environmental protection measures endorsed by the international Helsinki Commission (HELCOM) in 1979.
Findings from a long-term study of the Baltic Sea reveal possible answers to issues of intense worldwide concern As one of the best-investigated seas in the world for more than a century, the Baltic Sea has been subject to environmental protection measures endorsed by the international Helsinki Commission (HELCOM) in 1979.
Based on a fifty-year study conducted by the Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research, this book brings together a comprehensive summary of their observations and findings. Written by well-known experts, this revealing book concentrates on long-term changes in the Baltic Sea?which can be extrapolated to shed light on the environmental problems of other shelf seas, brackish seas, and large estuaries?thereby contributing to our understanding of water exchange processes, eutrophication, and climatic impacts at the forefront of international concern.
Rainer Feistel, PhD, is a physicist and oceanographer at IOW inWarnemünde, Germany, and is the author of four previous books.
Günther Nausch, PhD, is a senior marine chemist at IOW, where he works on nutrient cycles and long-term trend observations in the Baltic Sea.
Norbert Wasmund, PhD, is a senior marine biologist at IOW, where he specializes in phytoplankton research and is responsible for biological monitoring.
Based on a fifty-year study conducted by the Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research, this book brings together a comprehensive summary of their observations and findings. Written by well-known experts, this revealing book concentrates on long-term changes in the Baltic Sea--which can be extrapolated to shed light on the environmental problems of other shelf seas, brackish seas, and large estuaries--thereby contributing to our understanding of water exchange processes, eutrophication, and climatic impacts at the forefront of international concern.
Findings from a long-term study of the Baltic Sea reveal possible answers to issues of intense worldwide concern As one of the best-investigated seas in the world for more than a century, the Baltic Sea has been subject to environmental protection measures endorsed by the international Helsinki Commission (HELCOM) in 1979. Now, based on a fifty-year study conducted by the Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research (abbreviated IOW for Leibniz-Institut fur Ostseeforschung Warnemunde), this book brings together an organized and comprehensive summary of their fascinating observations and findings. Written by well-known experts from IOW and other international institutes, this revealing book concentrates on long-term changes in the Baltic Sea--which can be extrapolated to shed light on the environmental problems of other shelf seas, brackish seas, and large estuaries--thereby contributing to our understanding of water exchange processes, eutrophication, and climatic impacts at the forefront of international concern. Covering meteorology, climate, physics, chemistry, and biology, this book serves as a reference source for research into the long-term evolution of environmental problems, offering causes, effects, and possible solutions. It covers a wealth of information, including: Estuarine circulation and saltwater intrusions that dramaticallyaffect ecosystems Extreme and special weather situations, including ice conditions Climatic trends and variability and satellite image analyses Sea state characteristics and wind-driven and internal currents and waves Coastline formation and sedimentary records Eutrophication, concentration, and fluctuation of nutrients andtrace metals Phytoplankton, macrophytobenthos, zoobenthos, and fish stock Numerical modeling of the complex ecosystem And much more An accompanying CD-ROM provides useful supplementary material such as oceanographic reference data; long-term observational data on weather, sea level, ice cover and plankton, hydrochemical and hydrophysical data; and selected color figures from the book. State and Evolution of the Baltic Sea, 1952-2005 serves as an indispensable resource for students and scientists in oceanography, Baltic Sea research, environmental fields or the geosciences, marine biology, and politics.
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