Compared to other phytoplankton groups, nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria generally prefer high water temperatures for growth and are therefore expected to benefit from global warming. We use a coupled biological-physical model with an advanced cyanobacteria life cycle model to compare the abundance of cyanobacteria in the Baltic Sea during two different time periods (1969-1998; 2069-2098). For the latter, we find prolonged growth and a more than twofold increase in the climatologically (30 years) averaged cyanobacteria biomass and nitrogen fixation. Additional sensitivity experiments indicate that the biological-physical feedback mechanism through light absorption becomes more important with global warming. In general, we find a nonlinear resp...
Climate change has multiple effects on Baltic Sea species, communities and ecosystem functioning thr...
The Baltic Sea is located between 53°N to 66°N and from 10°E to 30°E and is the second largest brack...
Future climate scenarios in the Baltic Sea project an increase of cyanobacterial bloom frequency and...
Compared to other phytoplankton groups, nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria generally prefer high water te...
Dense blooms of filamentous diazotrophic cyanobacteria are formed every summer in the Baltic Sea. Th...
Future climate scenarios in the Baltic Sea project increasing sea surface temperature, as well as in...
There is an increasing need to describe cyanobacteria bloom dynamics using ecosystem models. We cons...
Evaluation of changes in Baltic Sea phytoplankton communities has been hampered by a lack of quantit...
We simulate pH-dependent growth of cyanobacteria with an ecosystem model for the central Baltic Sea....
Environmental changes, including hydrological modifications caused by global warming, are one of the...
Massive cyanobacteria blooms occur almost every summer in the Baltic Sea but the capability to quant...
Population oscillations in multi-species or even single species systems are well-known but have rare...
Future climate scenarios in the Baltic Sea project an increase of cyanobacterial bloom frequency and...
<p>Frequencies and biomass of Baltic Sea cyanobacterial blooms are expected to be higher in future c...
Frequencies and biomass of Baltic Sea cyanobacterial blooms are expected to be higher in future clim...
Climate change has multiple effects on Baltic Sea species, communities and ecosystem functioning thr...
The Baltic Sea is located between 53°N to 66°N and from 10°E to 30°E and is the second largest brack...
Future climate scenarios in the Baltic Sea project an increase of cyanobacterial bloom frequency and...
Compared to other phytoplankton groups, nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria generally prefer high water te...
Dense blooms of filamentous diazotrophic cyanobacteria are formed every summer in the Baltic Sea. Th...
Future climate scenarios in the Baltic Sea project increasing sea surface temperature, as well as in...
There is an increasing need to describe cyanobacteria bloom dynamics using ecosystem models. We cons...
Evaluation of changes in Baltic Sea phytoplankton communities has been hampered by a lack of quantit...
We simulate pH-dependent growth of cyanobacteria with an ecosystem model for the central Baltic Sea....
Environmental changes, including hydrological modifications caused by global warming, are one of the...
Massive cyanobacteria blooms occur almost every summer in the Baltic Sea but the capability to quant...
Population oscillations in multi-species or even single species systems are well-known but have rare...
Future climate scenarios in the Baltic Sea project an increase of cyanobacterial bloom frequency and...
<p>Frequencies and biomass of Baltic Sea cyanobacterial blooms are expected to be higher in future c...
Frequencies and biomass of Baltic Sea cyanobacterial blooms are expected to be higher in future clim...
Climate change has multiple effects on Baltic Sea species, communities and ecosystem functioning thr...
The Baltic Sea is located between 53°N to 66°N and from 10°E to 30°E and is the second largest brack...
Future climate scenarios in the Baltic Sea project an increase of cyanobacterial bloom frequency and...