Baltijos jūros hidrologinį režimą formuojančių hidrometeorologinių veiksnių analizė 1960–2009 m

Global Climate Modeling results show that since the mid-20th century noteable ocean–atmosphere interaction changes have begun due to which mean annual air temperature in all Baltic region may increase by 3–5 °C by 2100. It is likely that climate warming may have a greater impact on further Baltic Se...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bajerčiūtė, Asta, Pupienis, Donatas
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Lithuanian
English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://vu.lvb.lt/VU:ELABAPDB4598423&prefLang=en_US
id ftlithuaniansrc:oai:elaba:4598423
record_format openpolar
spelling ftlithuaniansrc:oai:elaba:4598423 2023-05-15T15:17:46+02:00 Baltijos jūros hidrologinį režimą formuojančių hidrometeorologinių veiksnių analizė 1960–2009 m Hydro-meteorological factors' influence on the Baltic Sea hydrological regime analysis in 1960-2009 Bajerčiūtė, Asta Pupienis, Donatas 2012 http://vu.lvb.lt/VU:ELABAPDB4598423&prefLang=en_US lit eng lit eng http://vu.lvb.lt/VU:ELABAPDB4598423&prefLang=en_US Geografija / Lietuvos mokslų akademija, Vilnius : Lietuvos mokslų akademijos leidykla, 2012, t. 48, nr. 1, p. 11-20 ISSN 1392-1096 The Baltic Sea Water salinity Water temperature River runoff Salt inflow from the North Sea Sea ice Precipitation Evaporation info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2012 ftlithuaniansrc 2021-12-02T01:12:43Z Global Climate Modeling results show that since the mid-20th century noteable ocean–atmosphere interaction changes have begun due to which mean annual air temperature in all Baltic region may increase by 3–5 °C by 2100. It is likely that climate warming may have a greater impact on further Baltic Sea hydrological conditions change. This article analyzes the influence of hydro-meteorological parameters such as river runoff, salt inflow from the North Sea, precipitation, sea ice and evaporation on water temperature and salinity change in 1960–2009 in the Baltic Proper. The previous research studies have shown that longterm climate change is related to atmospheric circulation processes. There are weak relationships during the winter season between the Baltic Sea water temperature and salinity change and atmospheric and oceanic indices like the NAO (North Atlantic Oscillation), AO (Arctic Oscillation) and long–indices. The previous research studies have shown that precipitation, evaporation and ice formation on the open sea do not play a major role in hydro-physical parameters change. However, the analysis has shown that there are weak relationships among the studied water temperature and salinity parameters in the Baltic Sea and river runoff, precipitation, sea ice and evaporation data. It was found that time and vertical delays exist between temperature and salinity of the Baltic Proper and hydro-meteorological factors. The strongest correlation exists between water temperature and sea ice cover area (–0.81 ≥ r ≤ –0.86), as well as water salinity and river flow (0.34 ≥ r ≤ 0.49). It was found that there are vertical lags between Baltic Proper temperature, salinity and hydro-meteorological factors from the surface to bottom and time lags. In the southern oceanographic stations, stronger correlation links exist between the studied hydro-physical parameters and hydro-meteorological factors at a 10–20 m deeper water horizon than in the northern stations. Also, 3–8 year time lag of water temperature and salinity to the mentioned factors change was identified. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Climate change North Atlantic North Atlantic oscillation Sea ice LSRC VL (Lithuanian Social Research Centre Virtual Library) Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection LSRC VL (Lithuanian Social Research Centre Virtual Library)
op_collection_id ftlithuaniansrc
language Lithuanian
English
topic The Baltic Sea
Water salinity
Water temperature
River runoff
Salt inflow from the North Sea
Sea ice
Precipitation
Evaporation
spellingShingle The Baltic Sea
Water salinity
Water temperature
River runoff
Salt inflow from the North Sea
Sea ice
Precipitation
Evaporation
Bajerčiūtė, Asta
Pupienis, Donatas
Baltijos jūros hidrologinį režimą formuojančių hidrometeorologinių veiksnių analizė 1960–2009 m
topic_facet The Baltic Sea
Water salinity
Water temperature
River runoff
Salt inflow from the North Sea
Sea ice
Precipitation
Evaporation
description Global Climate Modeling results show that since the mid-20th century noteable ocean–atmosphere interaction changes have begun due to which mean annual air temperature in all Baltic region may increase by 3–5 °C by 2100. It is likely that climate warming may have a greater impact on further Baltic Sea hydrological conditions change. This article analyzes the influence of hydro-meteorological parameters such as river runoff, salt inflow from the North Sea, precipitation, sea ice and evaporation on water temperature and salinity change in 1960–2009 in the Baltic Proper. The previous research studies have shown that longterm climate change is related to atmospheric circulation processes. There are weak relationships during the winter season between the Baltic Sea water temperature and salinity change and atmospheric and oceanic indices like the NAO (North Atlantic Oscillation), AO (Arctic Oscillation) and long–indices. The previous research studies have shown that precipitation, evaporation and ice formation on the open sea do not play a major role in hydro-physical parameters change. However, the analysis has shown that there are weak relationships among the studied water temperature and salinity parameters in the Baltic Sea and river runoff, precipitation, sea ice and evaporation data. It was found that time and vertical delays exist between temperature and salinity of the Baltic Proper and hydro-meteorological factors. The strongest correlation exists between water temperature and sea ice cover area (–0.81 ≥ r ≤ –0.86), as well as water salinity and river flow (0.34 ≥ r ≤ 0.49). It was found that there are vertical lags between Baltic Proper temperature, salinity and hydro-meteorological factors from the surface to bottom and time lags. In the southern oceanographic stations, stronger correlation links exist between the studied hydro-physical parameters and hydro-meteorological factors at a 10–20 m deeper water horizon than in the northern stations. Also, 3–8 year time lag of water temperature and salinity to the mentioned factors change was identified.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Bajerčiūtė, Asta
Pupienis, Donatas
author_facet Bajerčiūtė, Asta
Pupienis, Donatas
author_sort Bajerčiūtė, Asta
title Baltijos jūros hidrologinį režimą formuojančių hidrometeorologinių veiksnių analizė 1960–2009 m
title_short Baltijos jūros hidrologinį režimą formuojančių hidrometeorologinių veiksnių analizė 1960–2009 m
title_full Baltijos jūros hidrologinį režimą formuojančių hidrometeorologinių veiksnių analizė 1960–2009 m
title_fullStr Baltijos jūros hidrologinį režimą formuojančių hidrometeorologinių veiksnių analizė 1960–2009 m
title_full_unstemmed Baltijos jūros hidrologinį režimą formuojančių hidrometeorologinių veiksnių analizė 1960–2009 m
title_sort baltijos jūros hidrologinį režimą formuojančių hidrometeorologinių veiksnių analizė 1960–2009 m
publishDate 2012
url http://vu.lvb.lt/VU:ELABAPDB4598423&prefLang=en_US
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Climate change
North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
Sea ice
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
Sea ice
op_source Geografija / Lietuvos mokslų akademija, Vilnius : Lietuvos mokslų akademijos leidykla, 2012, t. 48, nr. 1, p. 11-20
ISSN 1392-1096
op_relation http://vu.lvb.lt/VU:ELABAPDB4598423&prefLang=en_US
_version_ 1766347998497865728