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Tracing pollution and recovery using sediments in an urban estuary, northern Baltic Sea: are we far from ecological reference conditions?

Authors :
Pirkko Kauppila
Sanna Vaalgamaa
Heikki Pitkänen
Nina Reuss
Simon Drew
Kaarina Weckström
Atte Korhola
Source :
Kauppila, P, Weckström, K, Vaalgamaaa, S, Korhola, A, Pitkänen, H, Reuss, N & Drew, S 2005, ' Tracing pollution and recovery using sediments in an urban estuary, northern Baltic Sea: Are we far from ecological reference conditions? ' Marine Ecology-Progress Series, vol. 290, pp. 35-53 ., University of Helsinki
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
Inter-Research Science Center, 2005.

Abstract

One of the primary challenges of the Water Framework Directive (WFD) of the Euro- pean Union is to provide a guide for the recovery of surface waters from pollution. However, few studies deal with reference conditions according to the WFD in coastal waters. Using the urbanised Laajalahti Bay (Helsinki, Finland) as an example, reference conditions and pollution history were defined using the stratigraphy of diatoms, sediment geochemistry, stable isotopes, sedimentary pig- ments, long-term monitoring results of water quality, and nutrient-loading. Principal components analysis was used to generate a multidimensional index of water quality on the basis of the sediment data. We distinguished 5 phases: (1) a pre-industrial phase (before ca. 1815); (2) a phase of slight human disturbance (ca. 1815 to 1900); (3) an onset of anthropogenic impact (ca. 1900 to 1955); (4) a severe pollution phase (ca. 1955 to 1975); (5) basin recovery and a phase of internal loading (from ca. 1975 onwards). Phase 2 was used to define reference conditions. Phase 1 was not used as it occurred before the formation of the semi-enclosed bay by post-glacial isostatic land-uplift. There was good agreement between the sedimentary record and the water-quality data during Phase 4. Despite an improvement in water quality after the local municipal treatment plant closed in 1986, Laajalahti Bay is still far from reference conditions due to internal loading.

Details

ISSN :
16161599 and 01718630
Volume :
290
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Marine Ecology Progress Series
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9334789bb03e9671f26d690e8304b9a4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3354/meps290035