Oceanologia No. 48 (3) / 06
Contents
Papers
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A model-measurements comparison of atmospheric forcing and surface fluxes of the Baltic Sea:
Claudia Rudolph, Andreas Lehmann
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Influence of wind climate changes on the mean sea level and current regime in the coastal waters of west Estonia, Baltic Sea:
Ülo Suursaar, Tiit Kullas
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Production of transparent exopolymer particles (TEP) in the nitrogen fixing
cyanobacterium Anabaena flos-aquae OL-K10:
Waldemar Surosz, Katarzyna A. Palińska, Agnieszka Rutkowska
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Modelling longshore sediment transport under asymmetric waves:
Rafał Ostrowski, Marek Szmytkiewicz
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Longshore sediment transport at Golden Sands (Bulgaria):
Hristo Nikolov, Ekaterina Trifonova, Zhivelina Cherneva, Rafał Ostrowski,
Marek Skaja, Marek Szmytkiewicz
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Development and dynamics of a coastal sub-surface phytoplankton bloom in the southwest Kattegat, Baltic Sea:
Lars Chresten Lund-Hansen
Communications
Papers
A model-measurements comparison of atmospheric forcing and surface fluxes of the Baltic Sea
Oceanologia 2006, 48(3), 333-360
Claudia Rudolph, Andreas Lehmann
Leibniz Institute of Marine Science at the University of Kiel,
Duestembrooker Weg 20, D-24105 Kiel, Germany;
e-mail: alehmann@ifm-geomar.de
Keywords:
Baltic Sea, coupled sea-ice-ocean model, air-sea interaction, surface fluxes, model-measurements comparison
Received 9 February 2006, revised 31 August 2006, accepted 11 September 2006.
Abstract
Observed basic meteorological quantities, heat and radiation
fluxes from three different measurement stations in the Baltic
Sea are compared with model data of the coupled sea-ice-ocean
model BSIOM in order to evaluate the atmospheric forcing, corresponding
surface fluxes and the sea surface response. Observational data
were made available from the BASIS winter campaigns in 1998 and
2001 as well as from the r/v "Alkor" cruise in June 2001. Simulated
fluxes were calculated from prescribed atmospheric forcing provided
from the SMHI meteorological database and modelled sea surface
temperatures. The comparison of these fluxes with observations
demonstrates a strong correlation, even though mean differences
in sensible heat fluxes range from 4 to 12 W m-2 in winter and
-25 W m-2 in the June experiment. Differences in latent heat
fluxes range from -10 to 23 W m-2. The short-wave radiation
flux used as model forcing is on average 15 W m-2 less than
the corresponding observations for the winter experiments and
40 W m-2 for the June experiment. Differences in net long-wave
radiation fluxes range from -5 to 12 W m-2 in winter and
-62 W m-2 for the June experiment.
The correspondence between measured and calculated momentum fluxes is very high, which confirms the
usability of our model component for calculating surface winds
and wind stresses from the atmospheric surface pressure.
Influence of wind climate changes on the mean sea level and
current regime in the coastal waters of west Estonia, Baltic
Sea
Oceanologia 2006, 48(3), 361-383
Ülo Suursaar, Tiit Kullas
Estonian Marine Institute, University of Tartu,
Mäealuse 10a, EE-12618 Tallinn, Estonia;
e-mail: ulo.suursaar@ut.ee
Keywords:
sea level, wind driven circulation, climate change, hydrodynamic models, Baltic Sea
Received 29 March 2006, revised 2 August 2006, accepted 7 August 2006.
This work was supported by the Estonian Science Foundation through
grants Nos 5929 and 5763.
Abstract
The response of semi-realistic wind speed increase scenarios
to the mean sea level and current regime of semi-enclosed sub-basins
in the Baltic Sea is studied with a 2D hydrodynamic model. According
to the model output of spatial mean sea levels, an increase in
the westerly wind component by 2 m s-1 leads, for example,
to a mean sea level rise of up to 3 cm in windward locations
in the study area. The sea level change patterns depend on the
wind scenario and coastline configuration. The increases in wind
speed considered here also lead to enhanced water exchange through
the straits, strengthening of the basin-scale circulation, enhancement
of up- and downwelling, and increased bottom stresses near coasts.
Production of transparent exopolymer particles (TEP) in the nitrogen fixing
cyanobacterium Anabaena flos-aquae OL-K10
Oceanologia 2006, 48(3), 385-394
Waldemar Surosz1*, Katarzyna A. Palińska2, Agnieszka Rutkowska1
1Institute of Oceanography, University of Gdańsk,
al. Marszałka Piłsudskiego 46, PL-81-378 Gdynia, Poland;
e-mail: ocews@univ.gda.pl
*corresponding author
2Carl von Ossietzky University, ICBM, Geomicrobiology,
PO Box 2503, D-26111 Oldenburg, Germany
Keywords:
transparent exopolymer particles (TEP), Anabaena flos-aquae, chlorophyll a concentration
Received 13 January 2006, revised 8 August 2006, accepted 28 August 2006.
Abstract
The aim of the study was to measure the transparent exopolymer
particles (TEP) concentration in cultures of Anabaena flos-aquae OL-K10
and to determine the relationship between the quantity of particles
produced and the light intensity, the age of the culture and
the presence of nitrogen in the culture medium. This is the first
time TEP production has been investigated in the Nostocales,
an order of nitrogen-fixing phytoplankton species. The results
showed that TEP production depends on the presence of nitrogen
in the culture medium. The longer the culture is grown, the higher
the correlation between its TEP content and its chlorophyll a
concentration.
Modelling longshore sediment transport under asymmetric waves
Oceanologia 2006, 48(3), 395-412
Rafał Ostrowski, Marek Szmytkiewicz
Institute of Hydroengineering,
Polish Academy of Sciences, (IBW PAN)
Kościerska 7, PL-80-328 Gdańsk, Poland;
e-mail: rafi@ibwpan.gda.pl
Keywords:
wave asymmetry, wave-current interaction, longshore sediment transport
Received 8 March 2006, revised 30 July 2006, accepted 2 August 2006.
Abstract
Two wave theories are applied in calculations of longshore sediment
transport rates: the second Stokes approximation and the cnoidal
theory. These approaches are used to model sand motion in nearshore
locations beyond and within the surf zone. Wave-current interaction
in the nearbed layer and bed shear stresses are solved using
a momentum integral method, whereas sediment transport is described
by a three-layer model encompassing bedload, contact load and
suspended load. Computational results for asymmetric waves are
compared with the results obtained using linear wave theory and
the conventional sediment transport models of Bailard (1981),
Bijker (1971) and Van Rijn (1993).
Longshore sediment transport at Golden Sands (Bulgaria)
Oceanologia 2006, 48(4), 413-432
Hristo Nikolov1, Ekaterina Trifonova1, Zhivelina Cherneva1, Rafał Ostrowski2,*, Marek Skaja2, Marek Szmytkiewicz2
1Institute of Oceanology, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences,(IO BAS),
PO Box 152, 9000 Varna, Bulgaria
2Institute of Hydroengineering,
Polish Academy of Sciences, (IBW PAN),
Kościerska 7, PL-80-328 Gdańsk, Poland;
e-mail: rafi@ibwpan.gda.pl
*corresponding author
Keywords:
Golden Sands, sediment transport, wave refraction and diffraction, offshore wave climate
Received 18 March 2006, revised 6 September 2006, accepted 11 September 2006.
The study was funded by the Ministry of Science and Higher Education,
Poland, under programme 2 IBW PAN, and by the IO BAS statutory research programme. The activities relating to this study were also supported within the joint Polish-Bulgarian
cooperation project by the Polish Academy of Sciences and the
Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, which are hereby gratefully acknowledged.
Abstract
The paper presents the results of studies on the qualitative
and quantitative features of the littoral drift at Golden Sands
(Bulgaria), carried out jointly by Polish and Bulgarian researchers.
The mathematical modelling of physical coastal processes took
wave transformation (wave diffraction and refraction; the effects
of shoaling and wave breaking) and longshore sediment transport
into account. The computations were carried out for the mean
statistical annual wave climate, determined on the basis of IO BAS
wave data, simulated using the WAM method from long-term Black
Sea wind data. The results of sediment transport computations
clearly show that its direction off the Golden Sands shore is
from north to south.
Development and dynamics of a coastal sub-surface phytoplankton bloom in the southwest Kattegat, Baltic Sea
Oceanologia 2006, 48(4), 433-446
Lars Chresten Lund-Hansen
Department of Marine Sciences,
Institute of Biology, Aarhus University,
Finlandsgade 14, 8200 Aarhus N, Denmark;
e-mail: lund-hansen@biology.au.dk
Keywords:
sub-surface phytoplankton, bloom dynamics, Kattegat
Received 13 March 2006, revised 29 July 2006, accepted 3 August 2006.
The study was a part of the research programme on Sub-Surface
Blooms financially supported by the Danish Natural Science Foundation,
contract No SNF 1424-28808.
Abstract
The study was based on CTD-casts performed on 5 consecutive days
at 7 positions along a shallow- to deep-water transect during
the spring bloom in the southwest Kattegat. The development,
dynamics and fate of the sub-surface chlorophyll maximum (SCM)
are described. The SCM developed at a constant rate of
1.4 mg chl a m-3 d-1,
which is equal to a carbon fixation rate of
49.0 mg C m-3 d-1. The SCM developed at 6 m depth at low irradiance
levels (10-43.0 µE m-2 s-1). Chl a concentrations reached
up to 23 mg chl a m-3 in the centre of the SCM. Growth rates
in the SCM were estimated at 0.82 d-1. The water column was
only weakly stratified, with nutrients in excess in the whole
of the water column. The SCM was relocated vertically to depths
below the photic zone by wind-induced advection between the bay
and the outer Kattegat. There were indications of a horizontal
relocation of the SCM by an internal standing wave. Application
of high spatial and temporal resolution made it possible to estimate
key SCM parameters, such as growth rates [mg chl a m-3 d-1]
and carbon fixation rate [mg C m-3 d-1],
on the basis of chl a variations in time and space.
Communications
The first observed bloom of the diatom Dactyliosolen fragilissimus (Bergon) Hasle 1996
in the Gulf of Gdańsk
Oceanologia 2006, 48(3), 447-452
Maria Łotocka
Institute of Oceanology, Polish Academy of Sciences,
Powstańców Warszawy 55, PL-81-712 Sopot, Poland;
e-mail: Anna.Olszewska@imgw.pl
present address: lotocka@iopan.gda.pl
Keywords:
Dactyliosolen fragilissimus, bloom, Gulf of Gdańsk
Received 24 August 2006, revised 4 September 2006, accepted 12 September 2006.
Abstract
The diatom Dactyliosolen fragilissimus (Bergon) Hasle 1996
(syn. Rhizosolenia fragilissima Bergon 1903) occurs in the
western Baltic Sea predominantly in summer, sometimes forming
blooms. In autumn 2005, numerous D. fragilissimus cells were
observed for the first time in the coastal waters of the Gulf
of Gdańsk. In November 2005 a bloom was formed: at its peak,
the diatom count was 1.1 × 106 cells dm-3 and its biomass
was 8.9 mg dm-3.