ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION IN NORTH AMERICAN LAKES: ATTENUATION ESTIMATES FROM DOC MEASUREMENTS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR PLANKTON COMMUNITIES

Climate warming in North America is likely to be accompanied by changes in other environmental stresses such as UV-B radiation. We apply an empirical model to available DOC (dissolved organic C) data to estimate the depths to which 1% of surface UV-B and UV-A radiation penetrate for several major re...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Craig Williamson, Richard Stemberger, Donald Morris, Thomas Frost, STEVEN PAULSEN
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://oaspub.epa.gov/eims/eimsapi.dispdetail?deid=14340
id ftepa:oai:epaEIMS:14340
record_format openpolar
spelling ftepa:oai:epaEIMS:14340 2023-05-15T17:22:37+02:00 ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION IN NORTH AMERICAN LAKES: ATTENUATION ESTIMATES FROM DOC MEASUREMENTS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR PLANKTON COMMUNITIES Craig Williamson Richard Stemberger Donald Morris Thomas Frost STEVEN PAULSEN 2005-12-22T16:26:06Z http://oaspub.epa.gov/eims/eimsapi.dispdetail?deid=14340 unknown Office of Research and Development Text 2005 ftepa 2007-11-21T14:48:24Z Climate warming in North America is likely to be accompanied by changes in other environmental stresses such as UV-B radiation. We apply an empirical model to available DOC (dissolved organic C) data to estimate the depths to which 1% of surface UV-B and UV-A radiation penetrate for several major regions of North America. UV attenuation depths are also estimated from DOC data collected from treatment and reference basins during the experimental acidification of Little Rock Lake, Wisconsin. In some regions of North America 25% of the lakes have 1% attenuation depths for UV-B radiation on the order of 4 m or more (western and northwestern U.S., Newfoundland). In other regions, 75% of the lakes have 1% attenuation depths for UV-B shallower than 0.5 m (Flordia, upper midwestern U.S., northwestern Ontario, Quebec, and Nova Scotia). Attenuation depths for UV-A radiation are ~2.5 times as deep as those for UV-B. Experimental acidification approximately doubled the estimated 1% attenuation depths for UV radiation in Little Rock Lake. The strong dependence of 1% attenuation depth on DOC below the 1-2 mg liter -1 DOC range suggests that UV attenuation in low DOC lakes is highly sensitive to even very small changes in DOC. We conclude that changes in climate, lake hydrology, acid deposition, and other environmental factors that after DOC concentrations in lakes may be more important than stratospheric ozone depletion in controlling future UV environments in lakes. Text Newfoundland Environmental Protection Agency (EPA): Science Inventory Rock Lake ENVELOPE(-97.673,-97.673,56.144,56.144)
institution Open Polar
collection Environmental Protection Agency (EPA): Science Inventory
op_collection_id ftepa
language unknown
description Climate warming in North America is likely to be accompanied by changes in other environmental stresses such as UV-B radiation. We apply an empirical model to available DOC (dissolved organic C) data to estimate the depths to which 1% of surface UV-B and UV-A radiation penetrate for several major regions of North America. UV attenuation depths are also estimated from DOC data collected from treatment and reference basins during the experimental acidification of Little Rock Lake, Wisconsin. In some regions of North America 25% of the lakes have 1% attenuation depths for UV-B radiation on the order of 4 m or more (western and northwestern U.S., Newfoundland). In other regions, 75% of the lakes have 1% attenuation depths for UV-B shallower than 0.5 m (Flordia, upper midwestern U.S., northwestern Ontario, Quebec, and Nova Scotia). Attenuation depths for UV-A radiation are ~2.5 times as deep as those for UV-B. Experimental acidification approximately doubled the estimated 1% attenuation depths for UV radiation in Little Rock Lake. The strong dependence of 1% attenuation depth on DOC below the 1-2 mg liter -1 DOC range suggests that UV attenuation in low DOC lakes is highly sensitive to even very small changes in DOC. We conclude that changes in climate, lake hydrology, acid deposition, and other environmental factors that after DOC concentrations in lakes may be more important than stratospheric ozone depletion in controlling future UV environments in lakes.
format Text
author Craig Williamson
Richard Stemberger
Donald Morris
Thomas Frost
STEVEN PAULSEN
spellingShingle Craig Williamson
Richard Stemberger
Donald Morris
Thomas Frost
STEVEN PAULSEN
ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION IN NORTH AMERICAN LAKES: ATTENUATION ESTIMATES FROM DOC MEASUREMENTS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR PLANKTON COMMUNITIES
author_facet Craig Williamson
Richard Stemberger
Donald Morris
Thomas Frost
STEVEN PAULSEN
author_sort Craig Williamson
title ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION IN NORTH AMERICAN LAKES: ATTENUATION ESTIMATES FROM DOC MEASUREMENTS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR PLANKTON COMMUNITIES
title_short ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION IN NORTH AMERICAN LAKES: ATTENUATION ESTIMATES FROM DOC MEASUREMENTS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR PLANKTON COMMUNITIES
title_full ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION IN NORTH AMERICAN LAKES: ATTENUATION ESTIMATES FROM DOC MEASUREMENTS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR PLANKTON COMMUNITIES
title_fullStr ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION IN NORTH AMERICAN LAKES: ATTENUATION ESTIMATES FROM DOC MEASUREMENTS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR PLANKTON COMMUNITIES
title_full_unstemmed ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION IN NORTH AMERICAN LAKES: ATTENUATION ESTIMATES FROM DOC MEASUREMENTS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR PLANKTON COMMUNITIES
title_sort ultraviolet radiation in north american lakes: attenuation estimates from doc measurements and implications for plankton communities
publishDate 2005
url http://oaspub.epa.gov/eims/eimsapi.dispdetail?deid=14340
long_lat ENVELOPE(-97.673,-97.673,56.144,56.144)
geographic Rock Lake
geographic_facet Rock Lake
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_source Office of Research and Development
_version_ 1766109392343662592