Ice break-up on southern Lake Baikal and its relationship to local and regional air temperatures in Siberia and to the North Atlantic Oscillation

The calendar date of ice break-up on southern Lake Baikal has been recorded uninterruptedly since 1869. A strong trend to earlier thawing up to around 1920 (1 d per 3.3 yr) is followed by the lack of any significant trend thereafter. For the period 1931-1994, the timing of break-up is related to loc...

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Published in:Limnology and Oceanography
Main Author: Livingstone, David M.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.4319/lo.1999.44.6.1486
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spelling fteawag:oai:dora:eawag_3882 2023-05-15T17:32:09+02:00 Ice break-up on southern Lake Baikal and its relationship to local and regional air temperatures in Siberia and to the North Atlantic Oscillation Livingstone, David M. 1999 https://doi.org/10.4319/lo.1999.44.6.1486 eng eng Wiley Limnology and Oceanography--Limnol. Oceanogr.--journals:1929--0024-3590 eawag:3882 journal id: journals:1929 issn: 0024-3590 ut: 000082201900012 local: 5836 scopus: 2-s2.0-0032816337 doi:10.4319/lo.1999.44.6.1486 Text Journal Article 1999 fteawag https://doi.org/10.4319/lo.1999.44.6.1486 2023-04-09T04:48:23Z The calendar date of ice break-up on southern Lake Baikal has been recorded uninterruptedly since 1869. A strong trend to earlier thawing up to around 1920 (1 d per 3.3 yr) is followed by the lack of any significant trend thereafter. For the period 1931-1994, the timing of break-up is related to local surface air temperatures integrated over periods of 1-3 months. Although highest unimodal correlations an with the 3-month mean air temperature, a bimodal relationship between break-up and air temperature exists at shorter integration times, with break-up date being related not only to the air temperature prevailing during thawing (April) but also to that prevailing during the time of ice formation, when air temperatures are lowest (February). High-frequency (interannual) fluctuations in the timing of break-up appear to be influenced mainly by the air temperatures prevailing during thawing, and low-frequency (interdecadal) fluctuations by those prevailing during ice formation. Whereas correlations with April air temperatures are always significant, those with February air temperatures an only significant during the latter part of this century, i.e., after cessation of the tendency toward earlier thawing. The high correlation between break-up date and integrated air temperature is not merely local but extends over most of Siberia and parts of northern China. Because air temperatures in Siberia contain a strong winter NAO (North Atlantic Oscillation) signal, so does the Lake Baikal break-up date, with up to 14% of the variance in the observed date of break-up being explained by the seasonal NAO index from January to March. As in the case of the air temperature data, a significant NAO signal in the break-up date can be detected only during the latter part of this century, implying that the influence of the NAO on the thawing of Lake Baikal during the early part of this century was probably negligible. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic North Atlantic oscillation Siberia DORA Eawag Southern Lake ENVELOPE(-94.333,-94.333,62.217,62.217) Limnology and Oceanography 44 6 1486 1497
institution Open Polar
collection DORA Eawag
op_collection_id fteawag
language English
description The calendar date of ice break-up on southern Lake Baikal has been recorded uninterruptedly since 1869. A strong trend to earlier thawing up to around 1920 (1 d per 3.3 yr) is followed by the lack of any significant trend thereafter. For the period 1931-1994, the timing of break-up is related to local surface air temperatures integrated over periods of 1-3 months. Although highest unimodal correlations an with the 3-month mean air temperature, a bimodal relationship between break-up and air temperature exists at shorter integration times, with break-up date being related not only to the air temperature prevailing during thawing (April) but also to that prevailing during the time of ice formation, when air temperatures are lowest (February). High-frequency (interannual) fluctuations in the timing of break-up appear to be influenced mainly by the air temperatures prevailing during thawing, and low-frequency (interdecadal) fluctuations by those prevailing during ice formation. Whereas correlations with April air temperatures are always significant, those with February air temperatures an only significant during the latter part of this century, i.e., after cessation of the tendency toward earlier thawing. The high correlation between break-up date and integrated air temperature is not merely local but extends over most of Siberia and parts of northern China. Because air temperatures in Siberia contain a strong winter NAO (North Atlantic Oscillation) signal, so does the Lake Baikal break-up date, with up to 14% of the variance in the observed date of break-up being explained by the seasonal NAO index from January to March. As in the case of the air temperature data, a significant NAO signal in the break-up date can be detected only during the latter part of this century, implying that the influence of the NAO on the thawing of Lake Baikal during the early part of this century was probably negligible.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Livingstone, David M.
spellingShingle Livingstone, David M.
Ice break-up on southern Lake Baikal and its relationship to local and regional air temperatures in Siberia and to the North Atlantic Oscillation
author_facet Livingstone, David M.
author_sort Livingstone, David M.
title Ice break-up on southern Lake Baikal and its relationship to local and regional air temperatures in Siberia and to the North Atlantic Oscillation
title_short Ice break-up on southern Lake Baikal and its relationship to local and regional air temperatures in Siberia and to the North Atlantic Oscillation
title_full Ice break-up on southern Lake Baikal and its relationship to local and regional air temperatures in Siberia and to the North Atlantic Oscillation
title_fullStr Ice break-up on southern Lake Baikal and its relationship to local and regional air temperatures in Siberia and to the North Atlantic Oscillation
title_full_unstemmed Ice break-up on southern Lake Baikal and its relationship to local and regional air temperatures in Siberia and to the North Atlantic Oscillation
title_sort ice break-up on southern lake baikal and its relationship to local and regional air temperatures in siberia and to the north atlantic oscillation
publisher Wiley
publishDate 1999
url https://doi.org/10.4319/lo.1999.44.6.1486
long_lat ENVELOPE(-94.333,-94.333,62.217,62.217)
geographic Southern Lake
geographic_facet Southern Lake
genre North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
Siberia
genre_facet North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
Siberia
op_relation Limnology and Oceanography--Limnol. Oceanogr.--journals:1929--0024-3590
eawag:3882
journal id: journals:1929
issn: 0024-3590
ut: 000082201900012
local: 5836
scopus: 2-s2.0-0032816337
doi:10.4319/lo.1999.44.6.1486
op_doi https://doi.org/10.4319/lo.1999.44.6.1486
container_title Limnology and Oceanography
container_volume 44
container_issue 6
container_start_page 1486
op_container_end_page 1497
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