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Dryad

Dataset for: Tracking freshwater browning and coastal water darkening from boreal forests to the Arctic Ocean

Data files

Jul 07, 2022 version files 55.94 MB
Feb 10, 2023 version files 137.83 MB
Mar 06, 2023 version files 54.93 MB
Jan 18, 2024 version files 54.58 MB

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Abstract

The forest cover of Northern Europe has been steadily expanding during the last 120 years. More terrestrial vegetation and carbon fixation leads to more export to surface waters. This may cause freshwater browning, as more degraded plant-litter ends up as chromophoric (coloured) dissolved organic matter. Although most freshwater ultimately drains to coastal waters, the link between freshwater browning and coastal water darkening is poorly understood. Here, we explore this relationship through a combination of centennial records of forest and coastal water clarity, contemporary optical measurements in lakes and coastal waters, as well as an ocean drift model. We suggest a link between forest cover in Northern Europe and coastal water clarity in the Baltic, Kattegat and Skagerrak Sea and show how brown coloured freshwater from Northern European catchments can dictate coastal water clarity across thousands of kilometres, from the Baltic lakes to the Barents Sea.