Abstract
Abstract. At high latitudes and altitudes one of the main controls
on hydrological and biogeochemical processes is the breakup and freeze-up of
lake and river ice. This study uses 3510 time series from across 678
Northern Hemisphere lakes and rivers to explore historical patterns in lake
and river ice phenology across five overlapping time periods (1931–1960,
1946–1975, 1961–1990, 1976–2005, and 1931–2005). These time series show that
the number of annual open-water days increased by 0.63 d per decade from
1931–2005 across the Northern Hemisphere, with trends for breakup and, to a
lesser extent, freeze-up closely correlating with regionally averaged
temperature. Breakup and freeze-up trends display a spatiotemporally complex
evolution and reveal considerable caveats with interpreting the implications
of ice phenology changes at lake and river sites that may only have breakup
or freeze-up data, rather than both. These results provide an important
contribution by showing regional variation in ice phenology trends through
time that can be hidden by longer-term trends. The overlapping 30-year time
periods also show evidence for an acceleration in warming trends through
time. Understanding the changes on both long- and short-term timescales will
be important for determining the causes of this change, the underlying
biogeochemical processes associated with it, and the wider climatological
significance as global temperatures rise.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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