EGU2020-18546
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-18546
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2020. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Water exchange in a coastal archipelago in the northern Baltic Sea

Elina Miettunen1, Laura Tuomi2, and Kai Myrberg1,3
Elina Miettunen et al.
  • 1Finnish Environment Institute, Helsinki, Finland (elina.miettunen@ymparisto.fi)
  • 2Finnish Meteorological Institute, Helsinki, Finland
  • 3Klaipeda University, Department of Natural Sciences, Faculty of Marine Technology and Natural Sciences, Klaipeda, Lithuania

The Archipelago Sea, situated in the northern Baltic Sea, consists of over 40 000 small islands and islets. It is a vulnerable area and suffers from continuous nutrient loading from the catchment and also from the background loading from the surrounding open sea areas. We studied water exchange in this complex coastal archipelago by simulating the water age and currents with a 3D hydrodynamic model COHERENS. The Archipelago Sea model setup has a horizontal resolution of c. 460 m and its boundary conditions are from a model setup that covers the whole Baltic Sea with a resolution of 3.7 km. The current fields produced with the hydrodynamic model were used to simulate the transport patterns of passive tracers through the archipelago with a Lagrangian particle model OpenDrift.

The mean water age was up to three months in the outer archipelago and up to seven months in the narrowest waterways in the inner archipelago. The effect of rivers on the water age was seen mostly only in the inner archipelago. The transport of passive tracer particles from the open sea areas, across the Archipelago Sea, mostly took place through the outer archipelago. The transport of particles from the outer archipelago towards the inner parts of the archipelago was very sensitive to the geometry and number of islands i.e. density of islands in the area. The prevailing wind direction in the area is from SW, this not being optimal for transport from the outer archipelago to the middle archipelago. For example, with the tracer particles from the southern open sea boundary, most transport to the middle archipelago was seen with SE winds. Transport further to the inner archipelago was limited only to few cases. The results show that the inner archipelago areas are relatively sheltered from transport from the open sea areas and the environmental problems there are in a high extent from local origin.

How to cite: Miettunen, E., Tuomi, L., and Myrberg, K.: Water exchange in a coastal archipelago in the northern Baltic Sea, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-18546, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-18546, 2020