Regime Shifts in Lake Oxygen and Temperature in the Rapidly Warming High Arctic

Author:

Klanten Yohanna123ORCID,MacIntyre Sally45,Fitzpatrick Cameron6ORCID,Vincent Warwick F.137,Antoniades Dermot123

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Northern Studies (CEN) Université Laval Québec QC Canada

2. Département de géographie Université Laval Québec QC Canada

3. Takuvik International Research Laboratory Université Laval Québec QC Canada

4. Department of Ecology, Evolution and Marine Biology University of California at Santa Barbara Santa Barbara CA USA

5. Marine Science Institute University of California at Santa Barbara Santa Barbara CA USA

6. Department of Geography and Environmental Studies Carleton University Ottawa ON Canada

7. Département de biologie Université Laval Québec QC Canada

Abstract

AbstractGlobal warming is destabilizing the cryosphere, with consequences for glaciers, permafrost, sea ice and lake ice. Polar lakes have short ice‐free seasons, and small changes in ice cover duration have the potential to provoke alterations to ecosystem structure. However, these lakes are understudied, and the consequences for mixing regimes, thermal structures and biogeochemical processes remain unclear. We measured three annual cycles of dissolved oxygen, temperature and specific conductivity in a lake at ∼83°N to investigate limnological processes and their interannual variability. There were sharp interannual contrasts in lake dynamics, with state shifts in mixing, stratification and oxygen regimes due to air temperature variability and meteorological events. We also observed unusual thermal profiles that were associated with solute gradients. These striking differences underscore the sensitivity of high Arctic lakes to interannual variations in meteorological forcing, and their susceptibility to regime shifts in response to ongoing global change.

Funder

Fonds de recherche du Québec – Nature et technologies

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Canada Research Chairs

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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