Objectives and scientific background
The North Sea is a shallow shelf sea with a deep trough along the Norwegian coast with
depth exceeding 700 m locally. Its physical status, primarily characterised by temperature
and salinity, is to a large extent determined by the exchange of water masses with the
Atlantic at its open northern boundary. There is also a link to the Atlantic via the English
Channel which is important for the shallow southern North Sea. The Baltic Sea is linked to
the North Sea via Skagerrak, Kattegat, Great and Little Belt, and The Sound. The Baltic
outflow with its low saline water influences significantly the oceanographic conditions of the
Skagerrak and Norwegian Coastal Current. Other drivers are inter alia continental river run-
offs, the ocean-atmosphere heat exchange, and the rate of precipitation to evaporation.
All parameters exhibit a strong seasonal and/or inter-annual variability. Seasonal heating
leads to the establishment of a seasonal thermocline between spring and end of August or
midst of September with vertical gradients exceeding 3 K/m in most of the years. Strength
and depth of the thermocline vary locally and from year to year. Near-bottom tidal mixing and
wind induced mixing at the surface suppress stratification in areas shallower than 25 to 30 m.
Stratified and vertically mixed areas are separated by so-called tidal mixing fronts.
In order to assess the physical and chemical state of the North Sea during summer the BSH
started its North Sea Summer Surveys (NSSS) in 1998. They cover the entire North Sea with
seven coast to coast east-west sections between 54° and 60°N and additional stations
Detween 54°N and the entrance of the English Channel. The surveys were realised at a time
when thermal stratification is expected to be at its maximum and phytoplankton production
has passed its maximum. With the exception of the first survey in 1998 all surveys served a
fixed grid of vertical CTD casts (see station without an A, B, or S in Fig. 1). Between the
CTD-stations ship-mounted temperature-, salinity- and optical sensors provided data at
about 4 m depth.
For the monitoring of artificial radio nuclides additional stations in the English Channel
respectively in the Skagerrak are served alternately every second year.
The objective of the NSSSs is the assessment of the oceanographic and chemical state of
the North Sea, the calculation of heat and salt budgets, and the identification of changes due
to climate change. The data are also used for the validation of operational and climate
models and for the calibration of satellite-based ocean colour data and downstream products
(Secchi depth, turbidity, CDOM, chlorophyll-a) which are used for assessments and MSFD
reporting. All NSSSs are listed in Table 1. Most of the data are available via the German
Oceanographic Data Centre (DOD) and the MEris MAtchup In-situ Database MERMAID.'
' http://www.bsh.de/en/Marine data/Observations/DOD_Data_Centre/index.jsp
http://hermes.acri.fr/mermaid/home/home.php