Hydrology Research (Aug 2021)

Relative impacts of increases of solar radiation and air temperature on the temperature of surface water in a shallow, eutrophic lake

  • Ryuichiro Shinohara,
  • Yoji Tanaka,
  • Ariyo Kanno,
  • Kazuo Matsushige

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2166/nh.2021.148
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 52, no. 4
pp. 916 – 926

Abstract

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We monitored lake surface water temperatures from 1992 to 2019 in Lake Kasumigaura, a shallow lake in Japan. We hypothesized that increases of shortwave radiation had increased surface water temperatures and heat fluxes more than had the increases of air temperature. We used the heat flux analyses and the sensitivity analyses to test the hypothesis. The fluxes of solar radiation gradually increased during the study period in a manner consistent with the phenomenon of global brightening. The increase was especially apparent in the spring. The rate of increase of surface water temperature was especially significant in May. Air temperature did not significantly increase in May, but it increased significantly in June (0.40 °C decade−1). A sensitivity analysis of the heat fluxes at the lake surface (shortwave radiation, longwave radiation, latent heat flux, and sensible heat flux) revealed that surface water temperature was more sensitive to changes of shortwave radiation than to air temperature during the spring. Although other factors such as inflows of groundwater and river water may also have impacted surface water temperatures, the increase of solar radiation appeared to be the major factor responsible for the increase of surface water temperature during the spring in Lake Kasumigaura. HIGHLIGHTS We observed water temperatures in Lake Kasumigaura for 28 years from 1992 to 2019.; The rate of increase of the water temperature was greater than the rate of increase of the atmospheric temperature in spring.; We clarified that increases of solar radiation had affected the surface water temperature more than the increases of atmospheric temperatures.;

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