A probabilistic assessment of the impairment status of areas of concern in the Laurentian great lakes: How far are we from delisting the Hamilton Harbour, Lake Ontario, Canada?

2021 ◽  
pp. 101271
Author(s):  
Ariola Visha ◽  
Alexander Lau ◽  
Cindy Yang ◽  
Satyendra P. Bhavsar ◽  
David Depew ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Vol 57 (9) ◽  
pp. 2019-2033 ◽  
Author(s):  
David A. R. Kristovich ◽  
Luke Bard ◽  
Leslie Stoecker ◽  
Bart Geerts

AbstractAnnual lake-effect snowstorms, which develop through surface buoyant instability and upward moisture transport from the Laurentian Great Lakes, lead to important local increases in snowfall to the south and east. Surface wind patterns during cold-air outbreaks often result in areas where the air is modified by more than one Great Lake. While it is known that boundary layer air that has crossed multiple lakes can produce particularly intense snow, few observations are available on the process by which this occurs. This study examines unique observations taken during the Ontario Winter Lake-effect Systems (OWLeS) field project to document the process by which Lake Erie influenced snowfall that was produced over Lake Ontario on 28 January 2014. During the event, lake-effect clouds and snow that developed over Lake Erie extended northeastward toward Lake Ontario. OWLeS and operational observations showed that the clouds from Lake Erie disappeared (and snow greatly decreased) as they approached the Lake Ontario shoreline. This clear-air zone was due to mesoscale subsidence, apparently due to the divergence of winds moving from land to the smoother lake surface. However, the influence of Lake Erie in producing a deeper lake-effect boundary layer, thicker clouds, increased turbulence magnitudes, and heavier snow was identified farther downwind over Lake Ontario. It is hypothesized that the combination of a low-stability, high-moisture boundary layer as well as convective eddies and limited snow particles crossing the mesoscale subsidence region locally enhanced the lake-effect system over Lake Ontario within the plume of air originating over Lake Erie.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Taylor R Stewart ◽  
Mark R Vinson ◽  
Jason D Stockwell

Changes in winter conditions, such as decreased ice coverage and duration, have been observed in the Laurentian Great Lakes over the past 20+ years and hypothetically linked to low Coregonus spp. survival to age-1. Most cisco (Coregonus artedi) populations are autumn spawners whose embryos incubate under ice throughout the winter. The quantity and quality of light during winter is regulated by ice and snow coverage, and light has been shown to affect embryo survival and development in some teleosts. We experimentally evaluated how cisco embryos from lakes Superior and Ontario responded to three light treatments that represented day-light intensity under 0-10, 40-60, and 90-100% ice coverage. Embryonic response measures included two developmental factors (embryo survival and incubation period) and two morphological traits (length-at-hatch and yolk-sac volume). Embryo survival was highest at the medium light treatment and decreased at high and low treatments for both populations suggesting cisco may be adapted to withstand some light exposure from inter-annual variability in ice coverage. Light intensity had no overall effect on length of incubation. Length-at-hatch decreased with increasing light in Lake Superior, but had no effect in Lake Ontario. Yolk-sac volume was positively correlated with increasing light in Lake Superior and negatively correlated in Lake Ontario. Contrasting responses in embryo development between lakes suggests differences in populations' flexibility to light. These results provide a step towards better understanding the recent high variability observed in coregonine recruitment and may help predict what the future of this species may look like under current climate trends.


2017 ◽  
Vol 60 (6) ◽  
pp. 1139-1154 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. L. Brooks ◽  
C. Boston ◽  
S. Doka ◽  
D. Gorsky ◽  
K. Gustavson ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
John Lekki ◽  
R. Anderson ◽  
Q.-V. Nguyen ◽  
J. Demers ◽  
J. Flatico ◽  
...  

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