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The extent and variability of storm-induced temperature changes in lakes measured with long-term and high-frequency data

Authors :
Doubek, Jonathan P.
Anneville, Orlane
Dur, Gael
Lewandowska, Aleksandra M.
Patil, Vijay P.
Rusak, James A.
Salmaso, Nico
Seltmann, Christian Torsten
Straile, Dietmar
Urrutia-Cordero, Pablo
Venail, Patrick
Adrian, Rita
Alfonso, Maria B.
DeGasperi, Curtis L.
de Eyto, Elvira
Feuchtmayr, Heidrun
Gaiser, Evelyn E.
Girdner, Scott F.
Graham, Jennifer L.
Grossart, Hans-Peter
Hejzlar, Josef
Jacquet, Stephan
Kirillin, Georgiy
Llames, Maria E.
Matsuzaki, Shin-Ichiro S.
Nodine, Emily R.
Piccolo, Maria Cintia
Pierson, Don C.
Rimmer, Alon
Rudstam, Lars G.
Sadro, Steven
Swain, Hilary M.
Thackeray, Stephen J.
Thiery, Wim
Verburg, Piet
Zohary, Tamar
Stockwell, Jason D.
Hydrology and Hydraulic Engineering
Marine Ecosystems Research Group
Tvärminne Zoological Station
Ecosystems and Environment Research Programme
Biological stations
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The intensity and frequency of storms are projected to increase in many regions of the world because of climate change. Storms can alter environmental conditions in many ecosystems. In lakes and reservoirs, storms can reduce epilimnetic temperatures from wind-induced mixing with colder hypolimnetic waters, direct precipitation to the lake's surface, and watershed runoff. We analyzed 18 long-term and high-frequency lake datasets from 11 countries to assess the magnitude of wind- vs. rainstorm-induced changes in epilimnetic temperature. We found small day-to-day epilimnetic temperature decreases in response to strong wind and heavy rain during stratified conditions. Day-to-day epilimnetic temperature decreased, on average, by 0.28°C during the strongest windstorms (storm mean daily wind speed among lakes: 6.7 ± 2.7 m s −1, 1 SD) and by 0.15°C after the heaviest rainstorms (storm mean daily rainfall: 21.3 ± 9.0 mm). The largest decreases in epilimnetic temperature were observed ≥2 d after sustainedstrong wind or heavy rain (top 5 th percentile of wind and rain events for each lake) in shallow and medium-depth lakes. The smallest decreases occurred in deep lakes. Epilimnetic temperature change from windstorms, but not rainstorms, was negatively correlated with maximum lake depth. However, even the largest storm-induced mean epilimnetic temperature decreases were typically

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..a4ef2d0dc9002c87931304e15b6f21ae