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Full text: 13: HELCOM Scientific Workshop on the Effects of the 1997 Flood of the Odra and Vistula Rivers

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Distribution Patterns Of Oder Discharges Into The Pomeranian Bight 
What Can Be Expected Under 'Normal Conditions' ? 
K. Nagel, V. Mohrholz, & C. Pohl 
Institut fur Oslseeforschung 
Seestrasse 15 
18119 Wamemunde 
Abstract 
Main factors influencing the distribution patterns of material discharged by the river Oder into the 
Pomeranian Bight are: 
the pulsating character of the outflow ('outflow events') 
the physical distribution and mixing of the material by wind controlled currents in the bight 
the modification of the material by biological, physical and chemical processes 
Due to the independent action of these factors, the distribution patterns are highly variable. 
In the TRUMP-project running from 1993 to 1996, the fate of the Oder plume was investigated 
during seven multi-ship cruises, some of them in cooperation with polish institutes. A short 
summary of the results is given here describing 'normal conditions' in the Pomeranian Bight before 
the flood event in summer 1997. 
Regional distribution of Oder discharges in the Pomeranian Bight and the Baltic Sea is controlled by 
physical transport and mixing. As the wind is the driving force for the development of currents in 
this area, two situations are of special interest: the 'west wind situation' and the 'east wind situation'. 
In both cases, the discontinous outflow of material can be followed in subsequent distribution 
patterns. Because biological processes are neglectable during winter, this season is characterized by 
significant correlations between salinity and nutrient salts. 
However, mixing is not the only mechanism that generates concentration gradients. A variety of 
additional factors, which are influenced by seasonal variations, affect the distribution of individual 
species of the discharged material: 
variations in the runoff of the river Oder 
(biological, physical and chemical) processes in the Stettin lagoon and in the lagoon of 
Greifswald 
(biological, physical and chemical) processes in the Pomeranian Bight 
Due to the interplay of these effects, amounts of riverine material in the Pomeranian Bight are highly 
variable. Concentrations of nutrient salts may change by nearly one order of magnitude within a few 
days or within a distance of a few miles. For other substances, e.g. DOC, variations are less 
pronounced, probably due to a higher background concentration in the Baltic Sea. As a 
consequence of modification processes in the lagoons, concentrations of individual species of the 
riverine material are not related to each other and thus may strongly influence other processes in the 
bight, e.g. generating limitating conditions for primary production or affecting transport mechanisms 
of some trace metals. 
On the background of the knowledge gained during the TRUMP-project and by the HELCOM 
monitoring program, it has to be stated that concentrations for most compounds analyzed during 
the Oder flood in summer 1997 are in a 'normal' range. Exceptional high concentrations had only 
been found for organic carbon and organic nitrogen and for silicate.
	        
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