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Three Case Studies of Lake Temperature and Stratification Response to Warmer Climate

TitleThree Case Studies of Lake Temperature and Stratification Response to Warmer Climate
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1991
AuthorsHondzo, M., and H. G. Stefan
JournalWater Resources Research
Volume27
Issue8
Pagination1837-1846
Date PublishedAUG 1991
ISBN Number0043-1397
KeywordsHABITAT, model, POTENTIAL CHANGES, WATER
Abstract

The impact of climatic warming on lakes will most likely have serious implications for water resources and water quality. Rather than using model predictions of greenhouse warming, this paper looks at the changes in heat balance and temperature profiles in a particularly warm year (1988) compared to a more normal one (1971). The comparisons are made for three different morphometrically different lakes located 45-degrees-N latitude and 93-degrees-W longitude (north central United States) and for the summer period (April 1 to October 31). Water temperatures are daily values simulated with a model driven by daily weather parameters and verified against several sets of measurements. The results show that in the warmer year epilimnetic water temperatures were higher, evaporative water loss increased, and summer stratification occurred earlier in the season.

Reference number

564

Short TitleThree Case Studies of Lake Temperature and Stratification Response to Warmer Climate
Citation Key564