Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

The biodiversity and distribution of gelatinous macrozooplankton was assessed in the Baltic Sea during September 2020. The dataset includes 40,601 species-specific gelatinous macrozooplankton records, representative of 236,329 gelatinous organisms caught across 73 stations in the south-western, central and northern Baltic Sea. Focus was devoted to changes in depth distributions in relation to salinity and an extended oxygen depletion event in the south-western Baltic Sea. In total, 56 Multinet-midi casts (5 depth-strata), 4 Multinet-maxi casts (9 depth-strata), as well as 17 bongo and 52 WP2 casts were performed from the surface to >3 m above the bottom. Data include depth resolved information on the abundance (m and m) and size structure of () the non-indigenous ctenophore - including larvae (1-3 mm), transitional (4-5 mm), young adult (6-9 mm) and adult (≥10 mm) ctenophores, as well as the native scyphozoan jellyfish species ( and (. Additionally, the zooplankton community is described from WP2 nets including species-specific size and biomass data. In total 40,601 individual gelatinous macrozooplankton specimens from samples and sub-samples were analyzed (raw-counts) with 39,771 (corrected-count 235,499), 744 and 86 records. We provide a detailed account of catchability of different life-stages and comparison of different net types. In general, at 89 % of the stations, adult were caught, at an average ( ± SD) density of 1.27 ± 0.97 ind m station (max 8.4 ind m, Flensburg Fjord at 10-7.5m). Young adults were caught at 78 % of the stations with 3 ± 2.4 ind m station (max 29.4 ind m, Eckernförde Bight, south of Flensburg Fjord at 0-2.5 m), but were absent from the northern Arkona Basin and east of Bornholm. At 71 % of the stations, transitional were caught at an average density of 19.2 ± 21.8 ind m station (max 129.2 ind m, WP2, Kiel Bight). Transitional were additionally absent from the central Arkona Basin. larvae were present at 68 % of all stations, with the maximum density observed in Kiel Bight with 642 ind m (WP2). Generally, high larvae densities with >500 ind m were found in the south-western Kiel Bight, with an overall average density of 257 ± 188 ind m. Scyphozoan jellyfish species were found at much lower densities. Maximum abundance of was observed in the Arkona Basin ( 79 at 4 to 6m), with abundances ranging from 0.003 to 1.7 ind m station. was primarily found in the upper 30 m, while was primarily present in waters >30 m (average of 0.002 to 0.07 m). The here presented data are essential to further investigate responses of jellyfish and ctenophores to climate change, especially considering salinity and low oxygen conditions, important global change pressure which are of special concern for the Baltic Sea. Note: The non-indigenous hydromedusae was only found at one station in Kiel Bight, off the Kiel Kanal exit to the SW Baltic Sea ( 1, 8mm, 0.05 ind m).

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12017932PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2025.111511DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

baltic sea
28
ind station
16
kiel bight
16
gelatinous macrozooplankton
12
average density
12
station max
12
arkona basin
12
ind
11
depth resolved
8
sea september
8

Similar Publications

Introduction: Harbor seals () and grey seals () are infected by trophically transmitted intestinal cestodes of the genus . species can cause zoonotic infections in humans when larval stages are ingested with undercooked fish products. Diphyllobothriid cestode prevalence, infection dynamics, and health impact in phocid seals around densely populated coastal areas are little understood, and their species delineation remains challenging.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The capacity of river mouths to reduce storm surge water levels upstream, referred to as along-estuary attenuation, has been assessed by several studies. The coastal protection function of semi-enclosed water bodies such as lagoons and channels with narrow inlets remains less explored and generalization is hampered by differences in morphology and hydrodynamic forcing. Here we use a hydrodynamic model to investigate surge attenuation along a microtidal channel with a narrow inlet at the Baltic Sea coast of Germany called The Schlei.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The record storm surge of October 2023, which hit the southwestern German Baltic Sea, not only resulted in significant damages to coastal communities and infrastructure but also demonstrated that the region was prepared and able to avoid loss of lives and other catastrophic impacts. Numerical modelling has been a key tool utilised for providing information to support coastal flood management, at different levels of planning, for such events. Based on recent research conducted in the Baltic coast region as well as on empirical evidence acquired during the event, we present an operational scheme that utilises modelling tools and frameworks for supporting coastal flood management in the region.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The microplastics (0.3-5 mm) and mesoplastics (5-25 mm) in the non-tidal estuary of the Pregolya River (south-eastern Baltic Sea) were investigated for the first time in order to trace the retention zone (estuarine microplastic maxima, EMPM) at the river-sea interface, which is characterised by a salinity gradient. The mean abundance of all plastics (0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Decarbonising the plastic industry: A review of carbon emissions in the lifecycle of plastics production.

Sci Total Environ

August 2025

Tallinn University of Technology, Department of Civil Engineering and Architecture, Ehitajate tee 5, 19086 Tallinn, Estonia. Electronic address:

The role of plastics is well-documented in the literature reflecting on its impact on a global economy, planetary and human health. However, there is an urgent need for additional studies analysing their carbon emissions and ways to handle them. This short communication discusses the measures needed to understand and mitigate plastics' carbon footprint while paving a path toward cleaner, sustainable and circular plastic industry.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF