4.6 Article

Temperature in lowland Danish streams: contemporary patterns, empirical models and future scenarios

Journal

HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES
Volume 21, Issue 3, Pages 348-358

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hyp.6237

Keywords

lowland streams; water temperature; empirical models; future scenarios

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Continuous temperature measurements at I I stream sites in small lowland streams of North Zealand, Denmark over a year showed much higher summer temperatures and lower winter temperatures along the course of the stream with artificial lakes than in the stream without lakes. The influence of lakes was even more prominent in the comparisons of colder lake inlets and warmer outlets and led to the decline of cold-water and oxygen-demanding brown trout. Seasonal and daily temperature variations were, as anticipated, dampened by forest cover, groundwater input, input from sewage plants and high downstream discharges. Seasonal variations in daily water temperature could be predicted with high accuracy at all sites by a linear air-water regression model (r(2) : 0.903-0-947). The predictions improved in all instances (r(2) : 0-927-0-964) by a non-linear logistic regression according to which water temperatures do not fall below freezing and they increase less steeply than air temperatures at high temperatures because of enhanced heat loss from the stream by evaporation and back radiation. The predictions improved slightly (r(2): 0.933-0-969) by a multiple regression model which, in addition to air temperature as the main predictor, included solar radiation at un-shaded sites, relative humidity, precipitation and discharge. Application of the non-linear logistic model for a warming scenario of 4-5 degrees C higher air temperatures in Denmark in 2070-2100 yielded predictions of temperatures rising 1.6-3.0 degrees C during winter and summer and 4.4-6.0 degrees C during spring in un-shaded streams with low groundwater input. Groundwater-fed springs are expected to follow the increase of mean air temperatures for the region. Great caution should be exercised in these temperature projections because global and regional climate scenarios remain open to discussion. Copyright (c) 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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