Abstract

Warming trends of the Laurentian Great Lakes and surrounding areas have been observed in recent decades, and concerns continue to rise about the pace and pattern of future climate change over the world’s largest freshwater system. To date, many regional climate models used for the Great Lakes projection either neglected the lake-atmosphere interactions or only coupled with 1-D column lake models to represent the lake hydrodynamics. The study presents the Great Lakes climate change projection that has employed the two-way coupling of a regional climate model with a 3-D lake model (GLARM) to resolve 3-D hydrodynamics important for large lakes. Using the three carefully selected CMIP5 AOGCMS, we show that the GLARM ensemble average substantially reduces the surface air temperature and precipitation biases of the driving AOGCM ensemble average in present-day climate simulations. The improvements are not only displayed from the atmospheric perspective but also evidenced in accurate simulations of lake surface temperature, and ice coverage and duration. After that, we present the GLARM projected climate change for the mid-21st century (2030–2049) and the late century (2080–2099) for the RCP4.5 and RCP8.5. Under RCP 8.5, the Great Lakes basin is projected to warm by 1.3–2.2 °C by the mid-21st century and 4.0–4.9 °C by the end of the century relative to the early-century (2000–2019). Moderate mitigation (RCP 4.5) reduces the mid-century warming to 0.8–1.9 °C and late-century warming to 1.8–2.7 °C. Annual precipitation in GLARM is projected to increase for the entire basin, varying from −0.4 % to 10.5 % during the mid-century and 1.2 % to 28.5 % during the late-century under different scenarios and simulations. The most significant increases are projected in spring and early summer when current precipitation is highest and little increase in winter when it is lowest. Lake surface temperatures (LSTs) are also projected to increase across the five lakes in all of the simulations, but with strong seasonal and spatial heterogeneities. The most significant LST increase will occur in Lake Superior. The strongest warming was projected in spring, followed by strong summer warming, suggesting earlier and more intense stratification in the future. In contrast, a relatively smaller increase in LSTs during fall and winter are projected with heat transfer to the deepwater due to strong mixing and energy required for ice melting. Correspondingly, the highest monthly mean ice cover is projected to be 3–6 % and 8–20 % across the lakes by the end of the century in RCP 8.5 and RCP 4.5, respectively. In the coastal regions, ice duration will decrease by up to 30–50 days.

Highlights

  • The Laurentian Great Lakes are the world’s largest surface freshwater systems, containing 84%of North America’s surface freshwater and 21% of the world’s supply of surface fresh water (EPA2014)

  • Under RCP 8.5, the Great Lakes basin is projected to warm by 1.3-2.2◦ C by the mid-21st century and 4.0-4.9◦ C by the end of the century relative to the early-century (2000-2019)

  • To validate the AOGCM selections, we show that our selected three-model ensemble average (AOGCM-EA3) 1) outperformed 19 individual CMIP5 AOGCMs and 2) was comparable to, if not better than, the 19-model ensemble average (AOGCM-EA19) in three performance metrics including correlation coefficient (R), centered root-mean-square deviation (RMSD) and standard deviation (Std) depicted in the Taylor diagram (Fig. 2-a)

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Summary

Introduction

The Laurentian Great Lakes are the world’s largest surface freshwater systems, containing 84%of North America’s surface freshwater and 21% of the world’s supply of surface fresh water (EPA2014). The Laurentian Great Lakes are the world’s largest surface freshwater systems, containing 84%. Of North America’s surface freshwater and 21% of the world’s supply of surface fresh water The Great Lakes support 1.3 million jobs and $82 billion in wages per year (Rau et al 2020). More than 34 million people call the Great Lakes basin home, and more than species of plants and animals inhabit it, including over 170 species of fish (EPA 2014). The. Great Lakes commercial, recreational, and tribal fisheries are collectively valued at more than. $7 billion annually and support more than 75,000 jobs Great Lakes and surrounding areas have undergone rapid warming (Austin and Colman 2007; Dobiesz and Lester 2009; Hayhoe et al 2010; Melillo et al 2014; Pryor et al 2014; Zhong et al 2016). The annual mean temperature over the Great Lakes basin has increased by

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