Thermal regime and components of water balance of lakes in Antarctica at the Fildes peninsula and the Larsemann Hills

Thermal regime and water balance components of 12 lakes located at two different parts of the Antarctic (the Fildes peninsula in the Maritime Antarctic and the Larsemann Hills in the continental Antarctica) were studied using the observations from three field campaigns in 2012–2014. The morphometric...

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Main Authors: Elena Shevnina, Ekaterina Kourzeneva
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2017-01-01
Series:Tellus: Series A, Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16000870.2017.1317202
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spelling doaj-44c2e4c4ee654e4dbfa2e59a56530c312020-11-25T00:24:50ZengTaylor & Francis GroupTellus: Series A, Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography1600-08702017-01-0169110.1080/16000870.2017.13172021317202Thermal regime and components of water balance of lakes in Antarctica at the Fildes peninsula and the Larsemann HillsElena Shevnina0Ekaterina Kourzeneva1Finnish Meteorological InstituteFinnish Meteorological InstituteThermal regime and water balance components of 12 lakes located at two different parts of the Antarctic (the Fildes peninsula in the Maritime Antarctic and the Larsemann Hills in the continental Antarctica) were studied using the observations from three field campaigns in 2012–2014. The morphometric characteristics of the studied lakes were updated with GPS/echo-sounding surveys, and changes in the length, width and volume of the lakes were revealed in comparison with the previous surveys. The thermal regime of the lakes was also studied by modelling, applying the lake model FLake, which is widely used in different environmental applications but was tested for the first time in the Antarctic conditions. In contrast to boreal lakes, for lakes in Antarctica the modelling results by FLake appeared to be sensitive to the light extinction coefficient. According to simulations, all lakes were mixed down to the bottom for the whole summer; however, the reasons for this are different for shallow and deep lakes. The sensitivity of different methods to calculate evaporation, by the Dalton-type empirical equation and by the atmospheric surface layer block of FLake, was studied. For endorheic lakes, the sensitivity appeared to be large, up to 47% of the total seasonal water volume change, which assumes that FLake has the potential to be used in hydrological applications to calculate evaporation. Seasonal variations of the volume of the lakes in the continental Antarctica are larger than in the Maritime Antarctic. Usually, small and medium-sized lakes accumulate or redistribute water during the warm season. However, the systems of big lakes also release the stored water through the mechanism of abrupt jumps, which simultaneously cause the inflow into the sea of huge amounts of fresh water during short time intervals.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16000870.2017.1317202Antarcticalake thermal regimelake water balance componentsseasonal freshwater inflowlake model FLake
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elena Shevnina
Ekaterina Kourzeneva
spellingShingle Elena Shevnina
Ekaterina Kourzeneva
Thermal regime and components of water balance of lakes in Antarctica at the Fildes peninsula and the Larsemann Hills
Tellus: Series A, Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography
Antarctica
lake thermal regime
lake water balance components
seasonal freshwater inflow
lake model FLake
author_facet Elena Shevnina
Ekaterina Kourzeneva
author_sort Elena Shevnina
title Thermal regime and components of water balance of lakes in Antarctica at the Fildes peninsula and the Larsemann Hills
title_short Thermal regime and components of water balance of lakes in Antarctica at the Fildes peninsula and the Larsemann Hills
title_full Thermal regime and components of water balance of lakes in Antarctica at the Fildes peninsula and the Larsemann Hills
title_fullStr Thermal regime and components of water balance of lakes in Antarctica at the Fildes peninsula and the Larsemann Hills
title_full_unstemmed Thermal regime and components of water balance of lakes in Antarctica at the Fildes peninsula and the Larsemann Hills
title_sort thermal regime and components of water balance of lakes in antarctica at the fildes peninsula and the larsemann hills
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Tellus: Series A, Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography
issn 1600-0870
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Thermal regime and water balance components of 12 lakes located at two different parts of the Antarctic (the Fildes peninsula in the Maritime Antarctic and the Larsemann Hills in the continental Antarctica) were studied using the observations from three field campaigns in 2012–2014. The morphometric characteristics of the studied lakes were updated with GPS/echo-sounding surveys, and changes in the length, width and volume of the lakes were revealed in comparison with the previous surveys. The thermal regime of the lakes was also studied by modelling, applying the lake model FLake, which is widely used in different environmental applications but was tested for the first time in the Antarctic conditions. In contrast to boreal lakes, for lakes in Antarctica the modelling results by FLake appeared to be sensitive to the light extinction coefficient. According to simulations, all lakes were mixed down to the bottom for the whole summer; however, the reasons for this are different for shallow and deep lakes. The sensitivity of different methods to calculate evaporation, by the Dalton-type empirical equation and by the atmospheric surface layer block of FLake, was studied. For endorheic lakes, the sensitivity appeared to be large, up to 47% of the total seasonal water volume change, which assumes that FLake has the potential to be used in hydrological applications to calculate evaporation. Seasonal variations of the volume of the lakes in the continental Antarctica are larger than in the Maritime Antarctic. Usually, small and medium-sized lakes accumulate or redistribute water during the warm season. However, the systems of big lakes also release the stored water through the mechanism of abrupt jumps, which simultaneously cause the inflow into the sea of huge amounts of fresh water during short time intervals.
topic Antarctica
lake thermal regime
lake water balance components
seasonal freshwater inflow
lake model FLake
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16000870.2017.1317202
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