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    The Role of Northern Lakes in a Regional Energy Balance

    Source: Journal of Hydrometeorology:;2005:;Volume( 006 ):;issue: 003::page 291
    Author:
    Rouse, Wayne R.
    ,
    Oswald, Claire J.
    ,
    Binyamin, Jacqueline
    ,
    Spence, Christopher
    ,
    Schertzer, William M.
    ,
    Blanken, Peter D.
    ,
    Bussières, Normand
    ,
    Duguay, Claude R.
    DOI: 10.1175/JHM421.1
    Publisher: American Meteorological Society
    Abstract: There are many lakes of widely varying morphometry in northern latitudes. For this study region, in the central Mackenzie River valley of western Canada, lakes make up 37% of the landscape. The nonlake components of the landscape are divided into uplands (55%) and wetlands (8%). With such abundance, lakes are important features that can influence the regional climate. This paper examines the role of lakes in the regional surface energy and water balance and evaluates the links to the frequency?size distribution of lakes. The primary purpose is to examine how the surface energy balance may influence regional climate and weather. Lakes are characterized by both the magnitude and temporal behavior of their surface energy balances during the ice-free period. The impacts of combinations of various-size lakes and land?lake distributions on regional energy balances and evaporation cycles are presented. Net radiation is substantially greater over all water-dominated surfaces compared with uplands. The seasonal heat storage increases with lake size. Medium and large lakes are slow to warm in summer. Their large cumulative heat storage, near summer?s end, fuels large convective heat fluxes in fall and early winter. The evaporation season for upland, wetland, and small, medium, and large lakes lasts for 19, 21, 22, 24, and 30 weeks, respectively. The regional effects of combinations of surface types are derived. The region is initially treated as comprising uplands only. The influences of wetland, small, medium, and large lakes are added sequentially, to build up to the energy budget of the actual landscape. The addition of lakes increases the regional net radiation, the maximum regional subsurface heat storage, and evaporation substantially. Evaporation decreases slightly in the first half of the season but experiences a large enhancement in the second half. The sensible heat flux is reduced substantially in the first half of the season, but changes little in the second half. For energy budget modeling the representation of lake size is important. Net radiation is fairly independent of size. An equal area of medium and large lakes, compared with small lakes, yields substantially larger latent heat fluxes and lesser sensible heat fluxes. Lake size also creates large differences in regional flux magnitudes, especially in the spring and fall periods.
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      The Role of Northern Lakes in a Regional Energy Balance

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    contributor authorRouse, Wayne R.
    contributor authorOswald, Claire J.
    contributor authorBinyamin, Jacqueline
    contributor authorSpence, Christopher
    contributor authorSchertzer, William M.
    contributor authorBlanken, Peter D.
    contributor authorBussières, Normand
    contributor authorDuguay, Claude R.
    date accessioned2017-06-09T17:13:44Z
    date available2017-06-09T17:13:44Z
    date copyright2005/06/01
    date issued2005
    identifier issn1525-755X
    identifier otherams-81428.pdf
    identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4224430
    description abstractThere are many lakes of widely varying morphometry in northern latitudes. For this study region, in the central Mackenzie River valley of western Canada, lakes make up 37% of the landscape. The nonlake components of the landscape are divided into uplands (55%) and wetlands (8%). With such abundance, lakes are important features that can influence the regional climate. This paper examines the role of lakes in the regional surface energy and water balance and evaluates the links to the frequency?size distribution of lakes. The primary purpose is to examine how the surface energy balance may influence regional climate and weather. Lakes are characterized by both the magnitude and temporal behavior of their surface energy balances during the ice-free period. The impacts of combinations of various-size lakes and land?lake distributions on regional energy balances and evaporation cycles are presented. Net radiation is substantially greater over all water-dominated surfaces compared with uplands. The seasonal heat storage increases with lake size. Medium and large lakes are slow to warm in summer. Their large cumulative heat storage, near summer?s end, fuels large convective heat fluxes in fall and early winter. The evaporation season for upland, wetland, and small, medium, and large lakes lasts for 19, 21, 22, 24, and 30 weeks, respectively. The regional effects of combinations of surface types are derived. The region is initially treated as comprising uplands only. The influences of wetland, small, medium, and large lakes are added sequentially, to build up to the energy budget of the actual landscape. The addition of lakes increases the regional net radiation, the maximum regional subsurface heat storage, and evaporation substantially. Evaporation decreases slightly in the first half of the season but experiences a large enhancement in the second half. The sensible heat flux is reduced substantially in the first half of the season, but changes little in the second half. For energy budget modeling the representation of lake size is important. Net radiation is fairly independent of size. An equal area of medium and large lakes, compared with small lakes, yields substantially larger latent heat fluxes and lesser sensible heat fluxes. Lake size also creates large differences in regional flux magnitudes, especially in the spring and fall periods.
    publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
    titleThe Role of Northern Lakes in a Regional Energy Balance
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume6
    journal issue3
    journal titleJournal of Hydrometeorology
    identifier doi10.1175/JHM421.1
    journal fristpage291
    journal lastpage305
    treeJournal of Hydrometeorology:;2005:;Volume( 006 ):;issue: 003
    contenttypeFulltext
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