Water quality in Gulf of Finland deteriorates alarmingly from last year
Published:
12 August 2003 y., Tuesday
The condition of coastal waters in the Gulf of Finland has clearly deteriorated from last year. Scientists on the Muikku, a research vessel of the Finnish Environment Institute (SYKE), have been taking samples in coastal waters during five summers, and most results from this year's two-week voyage are considerably more alarming than last year.
Thousands of square kilometres of sea bed in the Gulf of Finland are believed to be completely without oxygen. In addition to the bottom layers, there is a shortage of oxygen in the upper layers of the sea, which also kills life on the sea bed. The amount of nutrients on the bottom has increased many times over in places.
At worst the bed of the Gulf of Finland can release an amount of phosphorous equivalent to that contained in the untreated sewage of 16 million people.
This internal pollution of the Gulf of Finland is overtaking the impact of emissions from land. According to studies by special researcher Jouni Lehtoranta, an area of oxygen-free sea bed one square kilometre in area can release an amount of phosphorous equivalent to the untreated sewage of 4,000 people. "There are about four thousand of these square kilometres in the Gulf of Finland", Knuuttila says.
The city of St. Petersburg, which dumps about one third of its sewage into the Gulf of Finland completely untreated, is one of the main sources of pollution in the Gulf of Finland. However, the bottom of the Gulf of Finland can release an amount of phosphorous in a day that is many times greater than that which is caused by the emissions from St. Petersburg.
Šaltinis:
helsinki-hs.net
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Drug Trade Earns $10Bln per Year, Top Official Says
more »
The State Council, Chinese cabinet, in a circular publicized Sunday admitted that AIDS epidemic is still quickly spreading in the country and a series of urgent measures must be taken to change the situation
more »
The probe will test whether space-time can be distorted by Earth's rotation
more »
Three astronauts will blast off for the International Space Station (ISS) on April 19
more »
Drug-resistant tuberculosis is a particular problem in parts of the former Soviet Union and China, but data is lacking for other potential hot spots
more »
Injecting drug use, fuelled by illicit drug trafficking, is increasing the number of HIV/AIDS cases in southern Uzbekistan
more »
Aids epidemic threatens western Europe, warns UN
more »
HIV growth rates in Estonia, Russia and Ukraine among world's highest
more »
Italian scientists have found a second form of mad cow disease that more closely resembles the human Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease than the usual cow form of the illness
more »
Human-to-human transmission of bird flu may cause death of 2 Vietnamese
more »