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de Loë, Rob C., and Reid D.
Kreutzwiser. 2000. "Climate Variability, Climate Change
and Water Resource Management in the Great Lakes,"
Climatic Change, Vol. 45, No. 1, April, pp. 163-179.
ABSTRACT: Water managers always have had to cope with
climate variability. All water management practices are,
to some extent, a response to natural hydrologic variability.
Climate change poses a different kind of problem. Adaptation
to climate change in water resource management will involve
using the kinds of practices and activities currently being
used. However, it remains unclear whether or not practices
and activities designed with historical climate variability
will be able to cope with future variability caused by atmospheric
warming. This paper examines the question of adaptation
to climate change in the context of Canadian water resources
management, emphasizing issues in the context of the Great
Lakes, an important binational water resource.
Mortsch, Linda D. 1998. "Assessing
the Impact of Climate Change on the Great Lakes Shoreline
Wetlands," Climatic Change, Vol. 40, No. 2, October,
pp. 391-416.
ABSTRACT: Great Lakes shoreline wetlands are adapted
to a variable water supply. They require the disturbance
of water level fluctuations to maintain their productivity.
However, the magnitude and rate of climate change could
alter the hydrology of the Great Lakes and affect wetland
ecosystems. Wetlands would have to adjust to a new pattern
of water level fluctuations; the timing, duration, and range
of these fluctuations are critical to the wetland ecosystem
response. Two "what if" scenarios: (1) an increased
frequency and duration of low water levels and (2) a changed
temporal distribution and amplitude of seasonal water levels
were developed to assess the sensitivity of shoreline wetlands
to climate change. Wetland functions and values such as
wildlife, waterfowl and fish habitat, water quality, areal
extent, and vegetation diversity are affected by these scenarios.
Key wetlands are at risk, particularly those that are impeded
from adapting to the new water level conditions by man-made
structures or geomorphic conditions. Wetland remediation,
protection and enhancement policies and programs must consider
climate change as an additional stressor of wetlands.
Croley II, Thomas E., Frank H.
Quinn, Kenneth E. Kunkel, and Stanley A. Changnon. 1998.
"Great Lakes Hydrology Under Transposed Climates,"
Climatic Change, Vol. 38, No. 4, April, pp. 405-433.
ABSTRACT: Historical climates, based on 43 years of
daily data from areas south and southwest of the Great Lakes,
were used to examine the hydrological response of the Great
Lakes to warmer climates. The Great Lakes Environmental
Research Laboratory used their conceptual models for simulating
moisture storages in, and runoff from, the 121 watersheds
draining into the Great Lakes, over-lake precipitation into
each lake, and the heat storages in, and evaporation from,
each lake. This transposition of actual climates incorporates
natural changes in variability and timing within the existing
climate; this is not true for General Circulation Model-generated
corrections applied to existing historical data in many
other impact studies. The transposed climates lead to higher
and more variable over-land evapotranspiration and lower
soil moisture and runoff with earlier runoff peaks since
the snow pack is reduced up to 100%. Water temperatures
increase and peak earlier. Heat resident in the deep lakes
increases throughout the year. Buoyancy-driven water column
turnover frequency drops and lake evaporation increases
and spreads more throughout the annual cycle. The response
of runoff to temperature and precipitation changes is coherent
among the lakes and varies quasi-linearly over a wide range
of temperature changes, some well beyond the range of current
GCM predictions for doubled CO2 conditions.
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