Attribution of Lake Surface Water Temperature Change in Large Lakes Across China Over Past Four Decades

Author:

Huang Ling1,Wang Xuhui1ORCID,Yan Yanzi1,Jin Lei1,Yang Kun2ORCID,Chen Anping3ORCID,Zheng Rongshun1,Ottlé Catherine4ORCID,Wang Chenzhi15,Cui Yaokui6ORCID,Piao Shilong1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Urban and Environmental Sciences Sino‐French Institute for Earth System Science Peking University Beijing China

2. Department of Earth System Science Ministry of Education Key Laboratory for Earth System Modeling Institute for Global Change Studies Tsinghua University Beijing China

3. Department of Biology Colorado State University Fort Collins CO USA

4. Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l'Environnement IPSL CNRS‐CEA‐UVSQ Gif‐sur‐Yvette France

5. Leibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research (ZALF) Müncheberg Germany

6. School of Earth and Space Sciences Institute of RS and GIS Peking University Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractLake surface water temperature (LSWT) is a key parameter in lake energy budget and is highly vulnerable to climate change. However, the long‐term trends in LSWT across China and their driving factors remain uncertain. Here, we used a calibrated lake model to simulate LSWT over 1979–2018 for 91 large lakes (>100 km2) across China. Simulations reveal an overall LSWT warming trend (0.040°C yr−1, p < 0.05), but with large spatial variations. The majority of these lakes show significant warming trends (84%, 0.053°C yr−1), while a significant cooling trend is found in the seven lakes in the northwestern Tibetan Plateau (−0.064°C yr−1). LSWT of approximately 42% of the lakes increases more rapidly than the corresponding ambient air temperature. Regionally, the warming trend is highest for lakes in the Eastern Plain (0.049°C yr−1) and the lowest in the Yunnan‐Guizhou Plateau (0.016°C yr−1). The increases in simulated LSWT also vary across seasons, with a higher rate in winter and spring than in summer and autumn. Changes in air temperature, downward longwave radiation, and wind speed are the most important climatic drivers for LSWT changes. Lake surface warming could be more rapid under future global warming, necessitating greater attention to lake‐atmosphere interactions.

Funder

Ministry of Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Atmospheric Science,Geophysics

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