Sensitivity of oxygen dynamics in the water column of the Baltic Sea to external forcing

A 1-D biogeochemical/physical model of marine systems has been applied to study the oxygen cycle in four stations of different sub-basins of the Baltic Sea, namely, in the Gotland Deep, Bornholm, Arkona and Fladen. The model consists of the biogeochemical model of Neumann et al. (2002) coupled with...

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Main Authors: S. Miladinova, A. Stips
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2010-04-01
Series:Ocean Science
Online Access:http://www.ocean-sci.net/6/461/2010/os-6-461-2010.pdf
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spelling doaj-b0fcc4bb42ab4f6783eebe65caa948642020-11-25T00:27:48ZengCopernicus PublicationsOcean Science1812-07841812-07922010-04-016246147410.5194/os-6-461-2010Sensitivity of oxygen dynamics in the water column of the Baltic Sea to external forcingS. MiladinovaA. StipsA 1-D biogeochemical/physical model of marine systems has been applied to study the oxygen cycle in four stations of different sub-basins of the Baltic Sea, namely, in the Gotland Deep, Bornholm, Arkona and Fladen. The model consists of the biogeochemical model of Neumann et al. (2002) coupled with the 1-D General Ocean Turbulence Model (GOTM). The model has been forced with meteorological data from the ECMWF reanalysis project for the period 1998–2003, producing a six year hindcast which is validated with datasets from the Baltic Environmental Database (BED) for the same period. The vertical profiles of temperature and salinity are relaxed towards both profiles provided by 3-D simulations of General Estuarine Transport Model (GETM) and observed profiles from BED. Modifications in the parameterisation of the air-sea oxygen fluxes have led to a significant improvement of the model results in the surface and intermediate water layers. The largest mismatch with observations is found in simulating the oxygen dynamics in the Baltic Sea bottom waters. The model results demonstrate the good capability of the model to predict the time-evolution of the physical and biogeochemical variables at all different stations. Comparative analysis of the modelled oxygen concentrations with respect to observation data is performed to distinguish the relative importance of several factors on the seasonal, interannual and long-term variations of oxygen. It is found that natural physical factors, like the magnitude of the vertical turbulent mixing, wind speed and the variation of temperature and salinity fields are the major factors controlling the oxygen dynamics in the Baltic Sea. The influence of limiting nutrients is less pronounced, at least under the nutrient flux parameterisation assumed in the model. http://www.ocean-sci.net/6/461/2010/os-6-461-2010.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S. Miladinova
A. Stips
spellingShingle S. Miladinova
A. Stips
Sensitivity of oxygen dynamics in the water column of the Baltic Sea to external forcing
Ocean Science
author_facet S. Miladinova
A. Stips
author_sort S. Miladinova
title Sensitivity of oxygen dynamics in the water column of the Baltic Sea to external forcing
title_short Sensitivity of oxygen dynamics in the water column of the Baltic Sea to external forcing
title_full Sensitivity of oxygen dynamics in the water column of the Baltic Sea to external forcing
title_fullStr Sensitivity of oxygen dynamics in the water column of the Baltic Sea to external forcing
title_full_unstemmed Sensitivity of oxygen dynamics in the water column of the Baltic Sea to external forcing
title_sort sensitivity of oxygen dynamics in the water column of the baltic sea to external forcing
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Ocean Science
issn 1812-0784
1812-0792
publishDate 2010-04-01
description A 1-D biogeochemical/physical model of marine systems has been applied to study the oxygen cycle in four stations of different sub-basins of the Baltic Sea, namely, in the Gotland Deep, Bornholm, Arkona and Fladen. The model consists of the biogeochemical model of Neumann et al. (2002) coupled with the 1-D General Ocean Turbulence Model (GOTM). The model has been forced with meteorological data from the ECMWF reanalysis project for the period 1998–2003, producing a six year hindcast which is validated with datasets from the Baltic Environmental Database (BED) for the same period. The vertical profiles of temperature and salinity are relaxed towards both profiles provided by 3-D simulations of General Estuarine Transport Model (GETM) and observed profiles from BED. Modifications in the parameterisation of the air-sea oxygen fluxes have led to a significant improvement of the model results in the surface and intermediate water layers. The largest mismatch with observations is found in simulating the oxygen dynamics in the Baltic Sea bottom waters. The model results demonstrate the good capability of the model to predict the time-evolution of the physical and biogeochemical variables at all different stations. Comparative analysis of the modelled oxygen concentrations with respect to observation data is performed to distinguish the relative importance of several factors on the seasonal, interannual and long-term variations of oxygen. It is found that natural physical factors, like the magnitude of the vertical turbulent mixing, wind speed and the variation of temperature and salinity fields are the major factors controlling the oxygen dynamics in the Baltic Sea. The influence of limiting nutrients is less pronounced, at least under the nutrient flux parameterisation assumed in the model.
url http://www.ocean-sci.net/6/461/2010/os-6-461-2010.pdf
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