Guidelines for sampling and determination of silicate.
View/ Open
Average rating
votes
Date
2017Corporate Author
HELCOM
Status
PublishedPages
3pp.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Silicate is introduced to the Baltic Sea as a result of natural geological processes, as opposed to nitrogen and phosphorus, which levels are affected by human activities.
Although it is not listed among the HELCOM Core Indicators, silicate is still biologically significant. Since diatoms are dependent of dissolved silicate for growth, monitoring of silicate is essential for evaluation and modelling of nutrient status, and assessment of conditions for phytoplankton growth.
1.2 Purpose and aims
Monitoring of nutrients in seawater is carried out to identify and quantify the amount of nutrients, which may cause eutrophication. The aim is to provide spatiotemporal information for detection of short-term status and long-term trends......
Publisher
HELCOMHelsinki, Finland
Document Language
enSustainable Development Goals (SDG)
14.aEssential Ocean Variables (EOV)
NutrientsMaturity Level
MatureSpatial Coverage
Baltic SeaCitation
HELCOM (2017) Guidelines for sampling and determination of silicate. Helsinki, Finland, HELCOM, 3pp. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.25607/OBP-1811Collections
- CAPARDUS Practices [244]
- HELCOM Manuals and Guidelines [42]