Abstract Temperate lakes worldwide are losing ice cover but the implications for under‐ice thermal dynamics are poorly constrained. Using a 92‐year record of ice phenology from a temperate and historically dimictic lake, we examined trends, variability, and drivers of ice phenology and under‐ice temperatures. The onset of ice formation decreased by 23 days century−1, which can be largely attributed to warming air temperatures. Ice‐off date has become substantially more variable with spring air temperatures and cumulative February through April snowfall explaining over 80% of the variation in timing. As a result of changing ice phenology, total ice duration contracted by a month and more than doubled in interannual variability. Using weekly under‐ice temperature profiles for the most recent 36 years, we found that shorter ice duration decreased winter inverse stratification and was associated with an extended spring mixing period. We illustrate the limitations of relying on discrete ice clearance dates in our assumptions around under‐ice thermal dynamics by presenting high‐frequency under‐ice observations in two recent winters: one with intermittent ice cover and a year with slow spring ice clearance.
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Earlier ice melt increases hypolimnetic oxygen despite regional warming in small Arctic lakes
Abstract Although trends toward earlier ice‐out have been documented globally, the links between ice‐out timing and lake thermal and biogeochemical structure vary spatially. In high‐latitude lakes where ice‐out occurs close to peak intensity of solar radiation, these links remain unclear. Using a long‐term dataset from 13 lakes in West Greenland, we investigated how changing ice‐out and weather conditions affect lake thermal structure and oxygen concentrations. In early ice‐out years, lakes reach higher temperatures across the water column and have deeper epilimnia. Summer hypolimnia are the warmest (~ 11°C) in years when cooler air temperatures follow early ice‐out, allowing full lake turnover. Due to the higher potential for substantive spring mixing in early ice‐out years, a warmer hypolimnion is associated with higher dissolved oxygen concentrations. By affecting variability in spring mixing, the consequences of shifts in ice phenology for lakes at high latitudes differ from expectations based on temperate regions.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2021713
- PAR ID:
- 10536837
- Publisher / Repository:
- Wiley
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Limnology and Oceanography Letters
- Volume:
- 9
- Issue:
- 3
- ISSN:
- 2378-2242
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 258 to 267
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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