Hydrology and Earth System Sciences (Apr 2024)

Timing of spring events changes under modelled future climate scenarios in a mesotrophic lake

  • J. P. Mesman,
  • I. C. Jiménez-Navarro,
  • A. I. Ayala,
  • J. Senent-Aparicio,
  • D. Trolle,
  • D. C. Pierson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-28-1791-2024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28
pp. 1791 – 1802

Abstract

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Lakes experience shifts in the timing of physical and biogeochemical events as a result of climate warming, and relative changes in the timing of events may have important ecological consequences. Spring, in particular, is a period in which many key processes that regulate the ecology and biogeochemistry of lakes occur and also a time that may experience significant changes under the influence of global warming. In this study, we used a coupled catchment–lake model forced by future climate projections to evaluate changes in the timing of spring discharge, ice-off, the spring phytoplankton peak, and the onset of stratification in a temperate mesotrophic lake. Although the model explained only part of the variation in these events, the overall patterns were simulated with little bias. All four events showed a clear trend towards earlier occurrence under climate warming, with ice cover tending to disappear at the end of the century in the most extreme climate scenario. Moreover, relative shifts in the timing of these springtime events also occurred, with the onset of stratification tending to advance more slowly than the other events and the spring phytoplankton peak and ice-off advancing faster in the most extreme climate scenario. The outcomes of this study stress the impact of climate change on the phenology of events in lakes and especially the relative shifts in timing during spring. This can have profound effects on food web dynamics as well as other regulatory processes and influence the lake for the remainder of the growing season.