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Phytoplankton spring bloom biomass in the Gulf of Finland, Northern Baltic Proper and Arkona Basin in 2006

 

fmri logo.jpg 

Vivi Fleming and Seppo Kaitala

 

Key message

smile.gifThe spring bloom in the Gulf of Finland was less than half the size of last years bloom


smile.gifThe spring bloom was negligable in the Arkona Basin

 

smile.gifNo rising trend can be detected from 1992 to 2006 in the Gulf of Finland, the northern Baltic Proper or the Arkona Basin

 

Fig1.jpg 

Fig. 1:   Development of the spring bloom intensity from 1992 to 2006 in Arkona Basin (AB), the northern Baltic Proper (NB) and the western Gulf of Finland (GOF). The ship route is shown in the map as broken line and study areas are shadowed. Click image to enlarge.

Results and assessment

Environmental context

Chlorophyll a concentration is a relative measure of phytoplankton biomass in the water. Since high nutrient concentrations increase phytoplankton growth and subsequently the intensity and frequency of blooms, chlorophyll a can be used as an indicator of the eutrophication in a sea basin.

The intensity of the spring bloom reflects the scale of the nutrient reserves. The spring bloom species of diatoms and dinoflagellates consume most of the phosphorus and nitrogen nutrients that were built up in the water mass during the previous winter.

Policy relevance

The availability of nutrients regulates the primary production and biomass of planktonic algae and the nutrient ratio of the main nutrients nitrogen and phosphorus largely determines which species can proliferate. The eutrophication of the Baltic Sea is still accelerated by the diffuse loading of nutrients from the whole drainage area from scattered housing, agriculture, aquaculture and from traffic.

The spring bloom estimate for the Western Gulf of Finland 

The spring bloom intensity index in 2006 was lower than in the previous year and below the ten-year average (1996-2005) (Fig. 1). Both the bloom peak and length were lower than last year and the ten-year average (Fig. 2, Appendix 1). In addition, the bloom started very late, on the second week of April.

Fig2.jpg 

 

Fig. 2: The seven-day running average chlorophyll a curve in 2006 in the western Gulf of Finland (green). Pink ‘area’ illustrates the intensity index of the spring bloom, the spring bloom threshold is shown with a solid black line. Also the peak and length of bloom are presented.

Click image to enlarge.

The spring bloom estimate for the northern Baltic Proper

The 2006 spring bloom intensity index was slightly lower than the previous year and the long time average (Fig. 1, Fig. 3). Generally the bloom begins later in the northern Baltic Proper than the Gulf of Finland, but this was not the case in 2006 (Appendix 1).

Fig3.jpg 

 

Fig. 3: The seven-day running average chlorophyll a curve in 2006 in the northern Baltic Proper (green). Pink ‘area’ illustrates the intensity of the spring bloom, which is calculated as the intensity index; the spring bloom threshold is shown with a solid black line. Also the peak and length of bloom are presented. Click image to enlarge.

The spring bloom estimate for the Arkona Sea

The chlorophyll a seven day running average –curve did not rise above the threshold concentration of 5 µg/l in the Arkona Sea sub region. However, a slight rise in the chlorophyll a level reaching about 4 µg/l could be detected from the middle of March to the middle of April (Fig. 4, Appendix 1).

 

Fig4.jpg 

Fig. 4: The seven-day running average chlorophyll a curve in 2006 in the Arkona Basin (green). The intensity index is presented, and the spring bloom threshold is shown with a solid black line. Click image to enlarge.



Metadata

Technical information

1. Source:

Finnish Institute of Marine Research, contact persons Vivi Fleming and Seppo Kaitala.

2. Description of data:

Original unit of measure: mg chl a m-3

Original purpose of the data: Phytoplankton monitoring of FIMR, Alg@line project

3. Geographical coverage:

Gulf of Finland, Archipelago and Åland Sea, the Baltic Proper.

4. Temporal coverage:

1992-2006.

5. Methodology and frequency of data collection:

Automated flow-through sampling system on merchant ships, sampling depth ca. 5 m, fluorescence measurements every 100 to 300 meters during the period February/March to October/November. The fluorescence is calibrated to chlorophyll a using the weekly chlorophyll a samples. Interpolation of calibration constant is used in order to calibrate measurements also for the transects not taking water samples.

6. Methodology of data manipulation:

The spring bloom is estimated setting a chlorophyll a threshold level of 5 µg/l for the beginning and end of the bloom. The intensity index is calculated by integrating the ‘area’ under the chlorophyll seven-day average curve (pink area in figures 2 to 5). Also the length, peak and mean chlorophyll a level during the bloom are calculated.

Special cases:

If the chlorophyll a value decreases below the threshold in the middle of the bloom, the bloom is regarded to consist of two separate periods. Thus the intensity index and the length of the bloom is calculated using only the periods exceeding the threshold (Fig. 5a).

If the spring bloom does not exceed the threshold, the intensity index is zero, as well as the length, peak and mean values (Fig 5b).

If the data does not cover the beginning of the bloom (data collection has started too late), the calculated intensity index as well as length and mean values are smaller than in reality (Fig 5c). In appendix 1 these years are marked with an asterisk.

Springbloom_Fig5abc.jpg 

Fig. 5: The seven-day running average chlorophyll a curve (green), with spring bloom intensity index highlighted (pink area). a) A case where the spring bloom consists of two periods b) a case where spring bloom chlorophyll a level does not exceed the threshold c) a case where the data does not cover the beginning of the bloom.

Quality information

7. Strength and weakness (at data level):

Strength: Very high both temporal and spatial sampling frequency. Weaknesses: 1. The flow through chlorophyll a is not as accurate as measured directly from water samples, due to the fluorescence calibration method. 2. During some years data collection starts too late to cover the beginning of the spring bloom in the Southern Baltic; this is inevitable since sometimes the Gulf of Finland is still covered with ice at the start of the Southern Baltic spring bloom.

8. Reliability, accuracy, precision, robustness (at data level):

Measurement uncertainty: Chl a: 1 µg/l l if the concentration < 5.0 µg/l, 2.0 µg/l if the concentration > 10.0 µg/l.

9. Further work required (for data level and indicator level):

During some years the data collection started too late to cover the beginning of the spring bloom, due to ice in the Northern Baltic. In further development of the method one could take into account the missing data, possibly by approximating a starting date using information of the progress and beginning of bloom during previous years.

 

Appendix 1

The spring bloom estimates for Arkona Basin (AB), the northern Baltic Proper (NB) and the western Gulf of Finland (GOF) from 1992 to 2006. Estimates: spring bloom intensity index, mean chl a during bloom, length of bloom, highest peak of the bloom and the starting day of the bloom. Years in which data have not covered the beginning of the bloom are marked with an asterisk.

Arkona Basin

YearIndexMean (ug/l)Length (days)Peak (ug/l)Start day
20060 0  
20050 0  
20041086.0186.825-March
2003*3078.33713.411-March
20021737.92210.922-March
2001*1527.2218.619-March
2000*2026.7309.727-March
1999*2417.83114.810-April
1998996.6157.621-March
19970 0  
19961976.0338.910-April
19952287.13210.426-March
19941437.2208.929-March
19931317.7179.723-March
19920 0  

Northern Baltic Proper

YearIndexMean (ug/l)Length (days)Peak (ug/l)Start day
20062289.12512.06-April
20053007.54012.930-March
20042208.12711.22-April
20035229.35614.53-March
20023039.53213.24-April
200145111.34017.327-March
20002969.93013.69-April
1999*36711.83115.111-April
19982878.23514.422-March
19971406.1237.525-April
19964779.05317.15-April
19953758.74312.615-April
19942948.23612.713-April
199330710.23015.014-April
19922776.9409.210-April

Western Gulf of Finland

YearIndexMean (ug/l)Length (days)Peak (ug/l)Start day
20064431335198-april
2005101616.96032.826-April
20047229.37816.227-Feb
2003*106014.57328.812-March
200257612.84521.83-April
200183916.15233.919-March
200041310.93815.46-April
1999*55113.14220.012-April
19985089.15618.421-March
19972418.32912.820-April
199675512.26224.88-April
199575913.55625.48-April
199471011.46219.031-March
199365212.85125.411-April
199263813.34824.51-April

 


 

For reference purposes, please cite this indicator fact sheet as follows:

[Author’s name(s)], [Year]. [Indicator Fact Sheet title]. HELCOM Indicator Fact Sheets 2006. Online. [Date Viewed], http://www.helcom.fi/environment2/ifs/en_GB/cover/.
 

Last updated 8.9.2006