4.6 Article

The Mixing Regime and Turbidity of Lake Banyoles (NE Spain): Response to Climate Change

Journal

WATER
Volume 12, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w12061621

Keywords

climate change; turbidity; lake mixing regime; hydrothermal turbid plumes; rainfall

Funding

  1. Aigues de Banyoles [AB-UDG/2020/1]

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This study analyses the water temperature changes in Lake Banyoles over the past four decades. Lake Banyoles, Spain's second highest lake, situated in the western Mediterranean (NE Iberian Peninsula). Over the past 44 years, the warming trend of the lake's surface waters (0.52 degrees C decade(-1)) and the cooling trend of its deep waters (-0.66 degrees C decade(-1)) during summer (July-September) have resulted in an increased degree of stratification. Furthermore, the stratification period is currently double that of the 1970s. Meanwhile, over the past two decades, lake surface turbidity has remained constant in summer. Although turbidity did decrease during winter, it still remained higher than in the summer months. This reduction in turbidity is likely associated with the decrease in groundwater input into the lake, which has been caused by a significant decrease in rainfall in the aquifer recharge area that feeds the lake through groundwater sources. As a unique freshwater sentinel lake under the influence of the climate change, Lake Banyoles provides evidence that global warming in the western Mediterranean boosts the strength and duration of the lake's stratification and, in response, the associated decrease in the turbidity of its epilimnion.

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