The Pechora Sea is blocked by floating ice from November to Junea relatively short period. The main river entering the Sea is the
Pechora. The Sea's salinity ranges from 18 to 34 . At the central part of the Sea, the salinity stays around 34 ‰, and the temperature ranges from .
Bathymetry The Pechora Sea's average depth is , and its deepest point reaches . The mean depth ranges from in the Bay to south of
Novaya Zemlya. The Atlantic-influenced
Kolguyev Current, which influences the temperature and salinity of the central part of the Sea, flows eastwards. There are a few islands close to the coast, the largest of which is
Dolgiy Island. The Sea's shallowness makes it distinct from the rest of the Barents Sea. Over its area, the average depth in the Sea is around . This shallowness prevents the
upwelling of nutrients from the Atlantic, contributing to the Sea's low
pelagic productivity.
Hydrology As with the neighbouring
Kara Sea, the Pechora Sea's hydrologic situation is unique for its high input from rivers and heavy continental outflow. The Pechora River alone discharges about of freshwater into the Pechora Sea from the
Pechora Riverthe Pechora Sea's main source of inflowsupplying the Sea with a
sediment load of yearly. Compared to other seas around the world, the Arctic Ocean's river-heavy source of
inflow is significant, giving the Pechora Sea less Arctic-like characteristics than would be expected at latitudes so far from the
equator. The Pechora Sea together with the bordering Kara Sea (separated by the
jet stream) make up more than a third of the Arctic Ocean's total
runoff from continental sources (as opposed to mostly
saltwater sources like most oceans). This high input from rivers makes this area of the Arctic Ocean unique.
Temperature and salinity Ice formation is boosted by the Sea's low salinity. The temperature ranges from below ; at the central part of the Sea; and in summer and autumn at the southern part of the Sea. Its salinity ranges from 8 to 18 ‰ in the bay, 18 to 26 ‰ in the southern portion, and 34 ‰ in the central part, increasing with distance from the
mouth of the Pechora River.
Climate The Pechora Sea has a humid continental climate.
Polar bears and
Atlantic walrus are threatened by
climate change, which exceptionally burdens the Arctic. Counteracting the Sea's continental position is the influx of nutrients supplied by the Pechora River, which gives the Sea of sediment and of other suspended matter. The Sea's cold continental climate, a result of its location in the dead centre of the continent, gives favourable conditions to ice formation. As a result of this continental position and abundance of ice, the Sea's water column is stratified, its sediment is heterogeneous and its pelagic productivity is low.
Seafloor sediment -wide
fast ice covers the floor of the Sea's coastal zone. On top of it is
flaw polynya. ==Biogeography and ecology==