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Related: About this forumInstitute for Basic Science: Unprecedented Warming Threatens Earth's Lakes and their Ecosystems
https://www.ibs.re.kr/cop/bbs/BBSMSTR_000000000738/selectBoardArticle.do?nttId=24914Unprecedented Warming Threatens Earths Lakes and their Ecosystems
Lakes, with their rich biodiversity and important ecological services, face a concerning trend: rapidly increasing temperatures. A recent study published in Nature Geoscience by an international team of limnologists and climate modelers reveals that if current anthropogenic warming continues until the end of this century, lakes worldwide will likely experience pervasive and unprecedented surface and subsurface warming, far outside the range of what they have encountered before.
The study uses lake temperature data simulated by a state-of-the art climate computer model (Community Earth System Model, version 2) covering the period from 1850-2100 CE. It is the first model of its kind, which captures the dynamics and thermodynamics of lake systems in an integrated way with the atmosphere. Rather than running the computer model into the future only once, the scientists used an ensemble of 100 past-to-future simulations, which were run on one of South Koreas fastest computers (Aleph at the Institute for Basic Science). Each simulation generates a slightly different realization of natural climate variability while it also responds to the anthropogenic warming effects from increasing greenhouse gas concentrations. With this ensemble modelling approach, the scientists were able disentangle the range of naturally occurring lake temperature variations from those caused by human interference (Figure 1). This allowed the team for the first time to estimate the time when lake temperatures will permanently exceed natural bounds a situation referred to as no-analogue conditions.
Dr. Lei Huang, the studys lead author (now at Capital Normal University, Beijing, China) and former postdoctoral researcher at the IBS Center for Climate Physics in Busan, South Korea, emphasizes that on average lakes worldwide will face no-analogue climates by the end of this century. However, the timing of emergence varies globally. Tropical lakes, harboring rich biodiversity, will be the first to experience unprecedented conditions when global warming reaches ~2.4°C (above pre-industrial conditions).
While surface warming affects species in shallow lake layers, some organisms can migrate vertically to find more suitable thermal habitats. Therefore, it is crucial to also consider how warming penetrates the subsurface layers. Our study reveals synchronous emergence of no-analogue conditions in tropical lake subsurface layers, driven by rapid downward transmission of warming signals during frequent lake mixing events. In contrast, high-latitude lakes partly shield subsurface layers from surface warming through stratification, delaying or sometimes even preventing no-analogue climates at depths. says Dr. Iestyn Woolway, NERC Independent Research Fellow at Bangor University, UK, corresponding author of the study.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41561-024-01491-5Lakes, with their rich biodiversity and important ecological services, face a concerning trend: rapidly increasing temperatures. A recent study published in Nature Geoscience by an international team of limnologists and climate modelers reveals that if current anthropogenic warming continues until the end of this century, lakes worldwide will likely experience pervasive and unprecedented surface and subsurface warming, far outside the range of what they have encountered before.
The study uses lake temperature data simulated by a state-of-the art climate computer model (Community Earth System Model, version 2) covering the period from 1850-2100 CE. It is the first model of its kind, which captures the dynamics and thermodynamics of lake systems in an integrated way with the atmosphere. Rather than running the computer model into the future only once, the scientists used an ensemble of 100 past-to-future simulations, which were run on one of South Koreas fastest computers (Aleph at the Institute for Basic Science). Each simulation generates a slightly different realization of natural climate variability while it also responds to the anthropogenic warming effects from increasing greenhouse gas concentrations. With this ensemble modelling approach, the scientists were able disentangle the range of naturally occurring lake temperature variations from those caused by human interference (Figure 1). This allowed the team for the first time to estimate the time when lake temperatures will permanently exceed natural bounds a situation referred to as no-analogue conditions.
Figure 1: Schematic illustration of no-analogue lake water temperature conditions. The black curve denotes simulated mean water temperature from 100 computer model simulations, responding to external forcings (volcanos, aerosols, greenhouse gas concentrations), and grey shading indicates the range of naturally occurring lake temperature variations.
Dr. Lei Huang, the studys lead author (now at Capital Normal University, Beijing, China) and former postdoctoral researcher at the IBS Center for Climate Physics in Busan, South Korea, emphasizes that on average lakes worldwide will face no-analogue climates by the end of this century. However, the timing of emergence varies globally. Tropical lakes, harboring rich biodiversity, will be the first to experience unprecedented conditions when global warming reaches ~2.4°C (above pre-industrial conditions).
While surface warming affects species in shallow lake layers, some organisms can migrate vertically to find more suitable thermal habitats. Therefore, it is crucial to also consider how warming penetrates the subsurface layers. Our study reveals synchronous emergence of no-analogue conditions in tropical lake subsurface layers, driven by rapid downward transmission of warming signals during frequent lake mixing events. In contrast, high-latitude lakes partly shield subsurface layers from surface warming through stratification, delaying or sometimes even preventing no-analogue climates at depths. says Dr. Iestyn Woolway, NERC Independent Research Fellow at Bangor University, UK, corresponding author of the study.
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Institute for Basic Science: Unprecedented Warming Threatens Earth's Lakes and their Ecosystems (Original Post)
OKIsItJustMe
Jul 2024
OP
BOSSHOG
(39,836 posts)1. Brought to us by the people who wrote project 2025
Also known as trumps Mein Kampf. There is no global warming and we dont need to be concerned because billionaires need bigger yachts to keep up with other billionaires. Doing the right thing costs money and requires admissions of guilt.