Explaining the Non-significant Changes in Ice-off Date over Six Decades at Lake of Bays and Lake Nipissing, South-Central Ontario

Authors

  • Huaxia Yao Environmental Monitoring and Reporting Branch, Ontario Ministry of Environment, Conservation and Parks, Ontario, Canada.
  • Congsheng Fu Nanjing Institute of Geography and Limnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 73 East Beijing Road, Nanjing 210008, P. R. China.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/mono/978-81-19217-01-4/CH9

Keywords:

Ice-off date, non-significant trend, drivers, offsetting, relative contribution, Central Ontario

Abstract

The phenomenon of non-significant trends in ice-off date under a warming climate was quantitatively explained by three efforts:  exploring possible driving factors where possible and defining new factors to represent snow conditions, identifying the contributing factors through correlation and trend tests, and evaluating relative contributions through partial Mann-Kendall method. Why the ice-off became only slightly earlier over 62 years at Lake of Bays has been satisfactorily assessed: the increased winter temperature, increased total rain and decreased days of snow on ground acted as three promoting drivers to earlier ice-off date, but their promoting functions were effectively offset by adverse changes in four other factors (snowfall slope, precipitation slope, snowpack slope, and last day of snow). The ice-off date at Lake Nipissing did not have a significant trend over 58 years, although there were five factors  contributing to the ice-off decline without sufficient offsetting, suggesting that the ice-off of this lake may not be sensitive, or basically elastic, to the climatic variation stressor. Relative contributions of drivers as calculated helped explain how much they contributed to ice-off trends or how much they offset the influences.

Published

2023-04-21

How to Cite

Huaxia Yao, & Congsheng Fu. (2023). Explaining the Non-significant Changes in Ice-off Date over Six Decades at Lake of Bays and Lake Nipissing, South-Central Ontario. Collective Studies on Evapotranspiration, Drought Propagation, Catchment Modelling, and Changes in Ice Snow and Forest, 171–193. https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/mono/978-81-19217-01-4/CH9