4.5 Article

Loss of Ice Cover, Shifting Phenology, and More Extreme Events in Northern Hemisphere Lakes

期刊

出版社

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2021JG006348

关键词

lake ice; climate change; ice phenology; extreme events; winter limnology

资金

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council Discovery Grant
  2. Ontario Ministry of Innovation and Science
  3. Swedish Research Council [2020-03222]
  4. Swedish Research Council for Environment, Agricultural Sciences and Spatial Planning (FORMAS) [2020-01091]
  5. Limnological Institute, SB RAS project [0279-2021-0004]
  6. New York State Department of Environmental Conservation
  7. Cornell University Brown Endowment
  8. Global Lake Ecological Observatory Network
  9. Formas [2020-01091] Funding Source: Formas
  10. Swedish Research Council [2020-03222] Funding Source: Swedish Research Council

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study found that lake ice-on dates are getting later, ice-off dates are getting earlier, and ice duration is getting shorter on average over the past century. The trends in ice-on and ice duration have increased significantly in the last 25 years compared to previous periods, with more extreme events contributing to the loss of lake ice cover.
Long-term lake ice phenological records from around the Northern Hemisphere provide unique sensitive indicators of climatic variations, even prior to the existence of physical meteorological measurement stations. Here, we updated ice phenology records for 60 lakes with time-series ranging from 107-204 years to provide the first re-assessment of Northern Hemispheric ice trends since 2004 by adding 15 additional years of ice phenology records and 40 lakes to our study. We found that, on average, ice-on was 11.0 days later, ice-off was 6.8 days earlier, and ice duration was 17.0 days shorter per century over the entire record for each lake. Trends in ice-on and ice duration were six times faster in the last 25-year period (1992-2016) than previous quarter centuries. More extreme events in recent decades, including late ice-on, early ice-off, shorter periods of ice cover, or no ice cover at all, contribute to the increasing rate of lake ice loss. Reductions in greenhouse gas emissions could limit increases in air temperature and abate losses in lake ice cover that would subsequently limit ecological, cultural, and socioeconomic consequences, such as increased evaporation rates, warmer water temperatures, degraded water quality, and the formation of toxic algal blooms.

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