32 Years of Environmental Reporting for serious Environmental Professionals
Monday, March 12, 2012
Overall Great Lakes Ice Coverage Down 71% Since 1973
Mar  12: NOAA/Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory recently published a  paper in the American Meteorological Society (AMS) Journal of Climate entitled,  Temporal and Spatial Variability of Great  Lakes Ice Cover,  19732010. In this study, temporal and  spatial variability of ice cover in the Great Lakes are  investigated using historical satellite measurements from 1973 to 2010. The  seasonal cycle of ice cover was constructed for  all the lakes, including Lake St. Clair. A unique feature found in the seasonal  cycle is that the standard deviations (i.e., variability) of ice cover are larger than the climatological means for  each lake. This indicates that Great Lakes ice cover experiences large variability in response to  predominant natural climate forcing and has poor predictability. Spectral  analysis shows that lake ice has both quasi-decadal and interannual  periodicities of ~8 and ~4 yr.          
     There was a significant downward trend in ice  coverage from 1973 to the present for all of the lakes, with Lake Ontario  having the largest, and Lakes Erie and St. Clair  having the smallest. The translated total loss in lake ice over the entire  38-yr record varies from 37% in Lake St. Clair  (least) to 88% in Lake Ontario (most). The total  loss for overall Great Lakes ice coverage is  71%, while Lake Superior places second with a 79%  loss. An empirical orthogonal function analysis indicates that a major response  of ice cover to atmospheric forcing is in phase  in all six lakes, accounting for 80.8% of the  total variance. The second mode shows an out-of-phase spatial variability  between the upper and lower lakes, accounting for  10.7% of the total variance. The regression of the first EOF-mode time series to  sea level pressure, surface air temperature, and surface wind shows that lake ice mainly responds  to the combined Arctic Oscillation and El NiñoSouthern Oscillation  patterns.
     Access an abstract and link to accessing the  complete paper (click  here). Access an article on the study in Marquette Mining  Journal (click  here). 
 GET THE REST OF TODAY'S  NEWS (click  here)
32 Years of Environmental Reporting for serious Environmental Professionals
 32 Years of Environmental Reporting for serious Environmental Professionals
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