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Deeper waters are changing less consistently than surface waters in a global analysis of 102 lakes

Authors :
Adamovich, Boris V.
Adrian, Rita
Anneville, Orlane
Chandra, Sudeep
Colom-Montero, William
Devlin, Shawn P.
Dix, Margaret A.
Dokulil, Martin T.
Gaiser, Evelyn E.
Girdner, Scott F.
Hambright, K. David
Hamilton, David P.
Havens, Karl E.
Hessen, Dag O.
Higgins, Scott
Huttula, Timo
Huuskonen, Hannu
Isles, Peter D.F.
Joehnk, Klaus D.
Jones, Ian
Keller, Wendel
Knoll, Lesley B.
Korhonen, Johanna
Kraemer, Benjamin M.
Leavitt, Peter R.
Lepori, Fabio
Luger, Martin S.
Maberly, Stephen
Melack, John M.
Melles, Stephanie J.
Müller-Navarra, Dörthe C.
Pierson, Donald
Pislegina, Helena V.
Plisnier, Pierre-Denis
Richardson, David C.
Rogora, Michela
Rusak, James A.
Sadro, Steven
Salmaso, Nico
Saros, Jasmine E.
Saulnier-Talbot, Emilie
Schindler, Daniel E.
Schmid, Martin
Shimaraeva, Svetlana V.
Silow, Eugene A.
Sitoki, Lewis M.
Sommaruga, Ruben
Straile, Dietmar
Strock, Kristin E.
Thiery, Wim
Verburg, Piet
Vinebrooke, Rolf D.
Weyhenmeyer, Gesa A.
Zadereev, Egor S.
Publisher :
ETH Zurich

Abstract

Globally, lake surface water temperatures have warmed rapidly relative to air temperatures, but changes in deepwater temperatures and vertical thermal structure are still largely unknown. We have compiled the most comprehensive data set to date of long-term (1970–2009) summertime vertical temperature profiles in lakes across the world to examine trends and drivers of whole-lake vertical thermal structure. We found significant increases in surface water temperatures across lakes at an average rate of + 0.37 °C decade−1, comparable to changes reported previously for other lakes, and similarly consistent trends of increasing water column stability (+ 0.08 kg m−3 decade−1). In contrast, however, deepwater temperature trends showed little change on average (+ 0.06 °C decade−1), but had high variability across lakes, with trends in individual lakes ranging from − 0.68 °C decade−1 to + 0.65 °C decade−1. The variability in deepwater temperature trends was not explained by trends in either surface water temperatures or thermal stability within lakes, and only 8.4% was explained by lake thermal region or local lake characteristics in a random forest analysis. These findings suggest that external drivers beyond our tested lake characteristics are important in explaining long-term trends in thermal structure, such as local to regional climate patterns or additional external anthropogenic influences.<br />Scientific Reports, 10 (1)<br />ISSN:2045-2322

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........10b64be8a62b229c6d391d2003655557