• Title of article

    Integrated model projections of climate change impacts on a North American lake

  • Author/Authors

    Taner، نويسنده , , Mehmet ـmit and Carleton، نويسنده , , James N. and Wellman، نويسنده , , Marjorie، نويسنده ,

  • Pages
    14
  • From page
    3380
  • To page
    3393
  • Abstract
    Climate change is likely to impact terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems via numerous physical and biological mechanisms. This study outlines a framework for projecting potential impacts of climate change on lakes using linked environmental models. Impacts of climate drivers on catchment hydrology and thermal balance in Onondaga Lake (New York State) are simulated using mechanistic models HSPF and UFILS4. Outputs from these models are fed into a lake ecosystem model, developed in AQUATOX. Watershed simulations project increases in the magnitude of peak flows and consequent increases in catchment nutrient export as the magnitude of extreme precipitation events increases. This occurs concurrently with a decrease in annual stream discharge as a result of increased evapotranspiration. Simulated lake water temperatures increase by as much as 5 °C during the 2040–2069 time period, accompanied by a prolonging of the duration of summer stratification. Projected changes include shifts in the timing of nutrient cycling between lake sediments and water column. Plankton taxa projected to thrive under climate change include green algae and Bosmina longirostris. Responses for species at higher trophic levels are mixed. Benthic macroinvertebrates may either prosper (zebra mussels) or decline (chironomids), while fish (e.g., gizzard shad) exhibit high seasonal variability without any clear trend.
  • Keywords
    thermal stratification , Eutrophication , Algae , climate change , Hydrology , Lakes , ecosystem modeling
  • Journal title
    Astroparticle Physics
  • Record number

    2086163