Study Links Loss Of Ice Cover On Lakes To Climate Change
New Study From UW-Madison Researcher, Others Shows Global Consequences Of Local Lake Ice Cover
- Monday, January 28, 2019, 11:45am
Lake Mendota in Madison has frozen, thawed and frozen over again this winter, and a new study
— with help from a University of Wisconsin-Madison scientist — shows
the consequences of less lake ice are much bigger than fewer games of
pick-up hockey or a shorter ice fishing season.
Local
lakes are highly sensitive to global temperatures, making lake ice one
of the resources most threatened by climate change.
For
the first time ever, scientists have provided an estimate of how many
lakes across the Northern Hemisphere will lose ice cover and when.
Researchers found characteristics such as air
temperature, lake depth, elevation and shoreline all affect its
susceptibility to ice cover. Already, thanks to climate change, about
15,000 lakes that used to reliably freeze each winter are starting to
miss seasons. Even under the best circumstances, in which the global
community meets the target set by the Paris climate agreement, the number of lakes with intermittent freezing will likely double by the time the climate warms by 2 degrees Celsius.
"For
Lake Mendota, we’re entering that period right now, that it’s getting
warm enough in Wisconsin at this latitude," said John Magnuson,
professor emeritus and director emeritus at the UW-Madison Center for
Limnology, who was a lead author among an international group of
scientists publishing the study in the journal Nature Climate Change.
This map shows how the zone of intermittent ice moves north as the climate warms. John Magnuson/University of Wisconsin-Madison Center for Limnology
Magnuson pointed to the data on Lake Mendota for the 2018-19 winter to demonstrate how the predictions are becoming a reality today.
The lake officially froze over Jan. 10, one of the
latest days in the nearly 160 years it has been tracked. In all, there
were only three years in which the lake froze that late, Magnuson said. He
expects Lake Mendota could begin having winters where it does not
freeze over entirely as early as next year, or within the next five to
10 years.
"I
think a lot of people would wonder, will we have ice on Lake Mendota
for our grandchildren, or their grandchildren?" Magnuson said.
To
be clear, Lake Mendota — and many of the lakes examined in this study —
will not immediately stop freezing altogether. Instead, they will
experience "intermittent" ice, meaning one year the lakes might freeze,
and the next it might not.
Eventually,
however, the number of lakes that will experience occasional freezing
and the number of intermittent ice events will rise. Some lakes may stop
freezing altogether by the end of the century, according to the study.
The scientists used several climate change models to determine the possible frequency of these events more precisely.
If the global air temperature rises by 2 degrees Celsius,
the goal set by the Paris climate agreement, the number of lakes
experiencing intermittent ice will double to 35,300, affecting up to 394
million people who live within one hour of the shores.
In a worst-case scenario, in which greenhouse gas emissions are not mitigated and air temperatures jump by 8 degrees Celsius,
230,400 lakes and 656 million people in 50 countries will be impacted,
according to the research. This latter case would likely push the
ice-cover zone out of the United States and into northern Canada, as
well as threaten the ice cover of lakes in cold Scandinavian nations.
The researchers write that the loss of lake ice is a "harbinger of permanent ice loss."
The increasing lack of ice cover will have consequences for ecosystems and economies across the globe.
Unfrozen lakes lose more water to evaporation during
the winter and warm faster during the spring, which can decrease levels
of water and oxygen in the lake. These, in turn, can increase the
potential for harmful algal blooms and harm fish and lake wildlife.
Communities that rely on ice fishing or winter ice roads across lakes
for sustenance and transportation will experience more precarious
winters as well.
Unpredictable winter ice cover will also affect local tradition and activity, especially in lower Wisconsin, Magnuson said.
"People
who are interested in winter recreation and ice carnivals and things of
that nature will begin to find that they have to pay more attention to
what the lake is doing," Magnuson said. "Because there will be winters when we will not be able to use the lake in that way."
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