Małgorzata Merchel, Waldemar Walczowski, Piotr Wieczorek
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Anchored Argo profiling float experiments in the southern Baltic Sea: Puck Bay and Hel Peninsula
This article presents the results of three experiments conducted in 2022–2023 using an Argo autonomous profiling float anchored to the seabed with a thin line. The aim of the study was to prevent the float from drifting in order to perform measurements in a precisely defined location. The experiments were carried out in the Baltic Sea - in Puck Bay and the vicinity of the Hel Peninsula. Puck Bay, a shallow and sheltered body of water with a unique and sensitive ecosystem, provided an excellent location for testing the method under calm conditions. In contrast, the northern areas of the Hel Peninsula, exposed to strong currents and high waves, allowed for the evaluation of the method’s effectiveness in more dynamic conditions. The results of the experiments demonstrated that anchoring the Argo float is effective in shallow and sheltered waters with low wave activity and weak currents, such as Puck Bay. However, in the more challenging environment of the Hel Peninsula, the method proved to be less effective, indicating its limitations in harsher environmental conditions. Standard Argo floats, which are most often deployed in deeper parts of the Baltic Sea, provide limited data from shallow-water areas, particularly those near the coast and in enclosed waters such as lagoons and bays. The introduction of anchored Argo floats could complement the existing network of drifting floats, ensuring better coverage of shallow-water areas and improving the quality of marine environmental monitoring.
期刊介绍:
Frontiers in Marine Science publishes rigorously peer-reviewed research that advances our understanding of all aspects of the environment, biology, ecosystem functioning and human interactions with the oceans. Field Chief Editor Carlos M. Duarte at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology Thuwal is supported by an outstanding Editorial Board of international researchers. This multidisciplinary open-access journal is at the forefront of disseminating and communicating scientific knowledge and impactful discoveries to researchers, academics, policy makers and the public worldwide.
With the human population predicted to reach 9 billion people by 2050, it is clear that traditional land resources will not suffice to meet the demand for food or energy, required to support high-quality livelihoods. As a result, the oceans are emerging as a source of untapped assets, with new innovative industries, such as aquaculture, marine biotechnology, marine energy and deep-sea mining growing rapidly under a new era characterized by rapid growth of a blue, ocean-based economy. The sustainability of the blue economy is closely dependent on our knowledge about how to mitigate the impacts of the multiple pressures on the ocean ecosystem associated with the increased scale and diversification of industry operations in the ocean and global human pressures on the environment. Therefore, Frontiers in Marine Science particularly welcomes the communication of research outcomes addressing ocean-based solutions for the emerging challenges, including improved forecasting and observational capacities, understanding biodiversity and ecosystem problems, locally and globally, effective management strategies to maintain ocean health, and an improved capacity to sustainably derive resources from the oceans.