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Heat Waves Can Cause Hypoxia in Shallow Lakes

Summary/Abstract

The authors assessed how warm air temperatures, high solar radiation, and weak wind speeds might induce hypoxia in a shallow lake during a heat wave. The study simulated bottom-water dissolved oxygen concentrations and compared concentrations in 2022 with the average for the previous 30 years. The study found that hypoxia was most sensitive to wind speeds. When the wind speed was low, convection was insufficient to prevent hypoxia, but there was no hypoxia if the wind speed equaled the average speed during the previous 30 years. However, if solar radiation and air temperatures equaled the respective averages during the previous 30 years, hypoxia did not occur, even if wind speeds were low. The authors conclude that the combined effects of weak winds and either high solar radiation or air temperatures induced hypoxia during the heat wave of 2022.

Ryuichiro Shinohara, Shin-Ichiro S. Matsuzaki, Mirai Watanabe, Megumi Nakagawa, Hajime Yoshida, Ayato Kohzu, Heat Waves Can Cause Hypoxia in Shallow Lakes, 50 Geophysical Research Letters (Apr. 16, 2023).

View Resource
April 2023
Ryuichiro Shinohara, Shin-Ichiro S. Matsuzaki, Mirai Watanabe, Megumi Nakagawa, Hajime Yoshida, Ayato Kohzu
Geophysical Research Letters
Peer-reviewed Study
Japan
Impact Attribution
Impact Attribution → Ecosystem Impacts

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