Department of Biology, York University, 4700 Keele Street, Toronto, Ontario, M3J 1P3, Canada.
Eawag, Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Surface Waters - Research and Management, Kastanienbaum, 6047, Switzerland.
Sci Data. 2022 Jun 16;9(1):318. doi: 10.1038/s41597-022-01391-6.
In recent decades, lakes have experienced unprecedented ice loss with widespread ramifications for winter ecological processes. The rapid loss of ice, resurgence of winter biology, and proliferation of remote sensing technologies, presents a unique opportunity to integrate disciplines to further understand the broad spatial and temporal patterns in ice loss and its consequences. Here, we summarize ice phenology records for 78 lakes in 12 countries across North America, Europe, and Asia to permit the inclusion and harmonization of in situ ice phenology observations in future interdisciplinary studies. These ice records represent some of the longest climate observations directly collected by people. We highlight the importance of applying the same definition of ice-on and ice-off within a lake across the time-series, regardless of how the ice is observed, to broaden our understanding of ice loss across vast spatial and temporal scales.
近几十年来,湖泊经历了前所未有的冰层流失,这对冬季生态过程产生了广泛的影响。冰层的迅速消失、冬季生物的复苏以及遥感技术的广泛应用,为整合各学科提供了独特的机会,以便进一步了解冰损及其后果的广泛时空模式。在这里,我们总结了北美洲、欧洲和亚洲 12 个国家的 78 个湖泊的冰期记录,以便将现场冰期观测纳入未来的跨学科研究并加以协调。这些冰期记录代表了一些由人类直接收集的最长的气候观测记录。我们强调了在时间序列内,无论如何观察冰情,都要在一个湖泊内应用相同的结冰和融冰定义的重要性,以扩大我们对跨越广阔时空尺度的冰损的理解。