THE RELATIONSHIP OF THE SPATIAL STRUCTURE OF THE TOTAL SUSPENDED MATTER CONCENTRATION AND HYDROLOGICAL PARAMETERS IN THE NORTHERN BLACK SEA ACCORDING TO CONTACT MEASUREMENTS

Latushkin A.A., Artamonov Yu.V., Skripaleva E.A., Fedirko A.V.

Here we describe the features of the horizontal and vertical distribution of total suspended matter in the northern part of the Black Sea and their relationships with the water temperature, salinity, and density fields measured at the identical grid during hydro-optical surveys from 2016 to 2020. The results show that the primary sources of increased total suspended matter concentrations in the northern part of the Black Sea are low-salinity and turbid waters of the Kerch Strait; runoffs of the Rioni, Enguri, and other rivers in the east of the survey area; together with freshened waters of the Dnieper, Dniester, and Danube runoff from the northwestern shelf. Higher turbidity was observed in the deep-water part of the sea, associated with the cyclonic gyres and meanders of the Rim Current effects. The total suspended matter vertical structure features an upper mixed layer, which usually coincides in thickness with the upper thermohaline upper mixed layer. Significant negative correlations were found for this layer comparing total suspended matter concentration versus temperature and salinity, while the correlation appears positive with density values. Below, a total suspended matter subsurface maximum was observed in the seasonal thermocline and pycnocline layer. The high turbidity layer appeared almost an order of magnitude thinner in the regions of maximum temperature gradients versus the areas where the temperature gradient was weak. A local total suspended matter minimum occurred below the cold intermediate core, corresponding to the main thermocline, halocline, and pycnocline layer. Beneath this minimum, there was a local increase of total suspended matter coinciding with the upper boundary of the hydrogen sulfide zone.

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