A Swedish case study of contemporary and possible future consequences of climate change on lake function

Schweizerische Zeitschrift für Hydrologie - Tập 64 - Trang 171-184 - 2002
Thorsten Blenckner1, Anders Omstedt2, Markku Rummukainen3
1University of Uppsala, Evolution Biology Centre, Department of Limnology, Erken Laboratory,¶ Norr Malma 4200, SE-76173 Norrtälje, Sweden , , SE
2University of Göteborg, Department of Earth Sciences, SE-405 30 Göteborg, Sweden , , SE
3Swedish Meterological and Hydrological Institute, SE-60176 Norrköping, Sweden , , SE

Tóm tắt

A physical lake model was employed to obtain a basis of discussing the impact of climate variability and climate change on the ecology of Lake Erken, Sweden. The validity of this approach was tested by running the PROBE-lake model for a 30-year period (STD) with observed meteorological data. The lake is adequately modelled, as seen in the comparison with actual lake observations. The validated lake model was then forced with meteorological data obtained from a regional climate model (RCM) with a horizontal resolution of 44 km for present (CLTR) and 2 × CO2 (SCEN) climate conditions. The CLTR lake simulation compares reasonably with the STD. Applying the SCEN simulation leads to a climate change scenario for the lake. The physical changes include elevated temperatures, shorter periods of ice cover combined with two of ten years being totally ice-free, and changes in the mixing regime. The ecological consequences of the physical simulation results are derived from the historical dataset of Lake Erken. Consequences of a warmer climate could imply increased nutrient cycling and lake productivity. The results suggest that an application of RCMs with a suitable resolution for lakes in combination with physical lake models allows projection of the responses of lakes to a future climate.