Evaluation of Low-Cost, Automated Lake Ice Thickness Measurements

Author:

Reed David E.1,Desai Ankur R.2,Whitaker Emily C.3,Nuckles Henry4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, and Center for Global Change and Earth Observations, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan

2. Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, Wisconsin

3. Center for Limnology, University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, Wisconsin

4. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, and Department of Structural Engineering, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington

Abstract

AbstractClimate change is expected to decrease ice coverage and thickness globally while increasing the variability of ice coverage and thickness on midlatitude lakes. Ice thickness affects physical, biological, and chemical processes as well as safety conditions for scientists and the general public. Measurements of ice thickness that are both temporally frequent and spatially extensive remain a technical challenge. Here new observational methods using repurposed soil moisture sensors that facilitate high spatial–temporal sampling of ice thickness are field tested on Lake Mendota in Wisconsin during the winter 2015/16 season. Spatial variability in ice thickness was high, with differences of 10 cm of ice column thickness over 1.05 km of horizontal distance. When observational data were compared with manual measurements and model output from both the Freshwater Lake (FLake) model and General Lake Model (GLM), ice thickness from sensors matches manual measurements, whereas GLM and FLake results showed a thinner and thicker ice layer, respectively. The FLake-modeled ice column temperature effectively remained at 0°C, not matching observations. We also show that daily ice dynamics follows the expected linear function of ice thickness growth/melt, improving confidence in sensor accuracy under field conditions. We have demonstrated a new method that allows low-cost and high-frequency measurements of ice thickness, which will be needed both to advance winter limnology and to improve on-ice safety.

Funder

Division of Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences

Division of Environmental Biology

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Ocean Engineering

Reference27 articles.

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2. Bolsenga, S. J., 1978: Photosynthetically active radiation transmittance through ice. NOAA Tech. Memo. ERL GLERL-18, 55 pp. https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/pubs/tech_reports/glerl-018/tm-018.pdf.

3. Stronger winds over a large lake in response to weakening air-to-lake temperature gradient

4. High-resolution ground-penetrating radar profiles of perennial lake ice in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica: Horizon attributes, unconformities, and subbottom penetration

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