Abstract
AbstractIn dimictic lakes, the stable density stratification during summer and winter inhibits vertical mixing of nutrients and oxygen. This favors the development of hypolimnetic hypoxia, which degrades cool‐water fish habitat and enhances nutrient mineralization from the sediments. Fall and spring turnover events, therefore, provide a crucial biannual link between surface and bottom waters. However, the physical processes occurring to mix lakes during turnover events remain comparatively uninvestigated. In this study, long‐term field observations were supplemented with output from a three‐dimensional numerical model, to better understand turnover events within a small temperate lake during 2011–2017. Mid‐basin penetrative convection, sidearm convection, and wind‐induced mixing were identified, with mid‐basin convection likely contributing the most to turnover events; a typical side‐arm convective plume had 2% (spring) to 4% (fall) of the mass flux compared to those at mid‐basin. During fall turnover, wind shear only mixed the upper 35% of the surface mixed layer, with convection acting to deepen below. During spring turnover, ice‐cover sheltered the lake from wind, causing convection to be the only process occurring and lengthening the turnover duration (~ 51 d) compared to fall (~ 13 d).
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