Regular ship-based monitoring of the basin has been rather sparse in space and time. The basin is ice-covered part of the year. Because the environmental problems have been smaller than in other areas of the Baltic Sea the monitoring efforts have been smaller, too. However, Argo-floats have been used to monitor the basin about once a week for last seven years.
This routine is ongoing and is part of Finland’s Euro-Argo contribution. The data is freely available from Coriolis. There is also ship borne CTD-data available for the analysis of the vertical structure of the near surface salinity field. Most of the available CTD-data is publicly available through SeaDataNet and EMODnet.
There is seasonal cycle in the surface salinity because of melting of sea ice in the spring and fresh water supply from rivers when the snow cover on land melts and flows to the sea. Thus CTD-data from last 30-years are used in analysing the uncertainties of the extrapolation of the Argo-float subsurface salinity data to the very surface. This hold true for the Ferry Box data, too.
There is a continuous Ferry Box line along the central axis of the basin and that data gives good possibilities to estimate the horizontal salinity gradients within the basin. This Ferry Box is maintained by SYKE and is open data as well.