Great Lakes Moment: Decreasing Great Lakes ice cover has consequences | Great Lakes Now (2024)

By John Hartig

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Great Lakes Moment is a monthly column written byGreat Lakes NowContributor John Hartig. Publishing the author’s views and assertions does not represent endorsem*nt by Great Lakes Now or Detroit Public Television.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) reported that February 2023 was Earth’s fourth-warmest on record. In the Great Lakes basin, this is being witnessed through less lake ice cover, which is already having major impacts.

Greenhouse gas emissions from human activities are the leading cause of the Earth’s rapidly changing climate. As of February 13, 2023, only seven percent of the Great Lakes were covered in ice, which is significantly below the 35-40 percent ice cover expected for that time of year, according to NOAA’s Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory.

Although the lack of ice cover on the Great Lakes this winter has been helpful in the shipping world, it causes many ecosystem problems.

Lower ice levels on the Great Lakes leaves coastal areas less protected from strong winter storms and waves that can increase coastal erosion and damage lakefront properties. This erosion can, in turn, lead to excessive sedimentation problems and even severe flooding. In contrast, lake ice cover helps minimize erosion and protect lakeshore properties and developments.

Another impact of less Great Lakes ice cover is extreme weather, as evidenced by the increasing intensity and frequency of heavy rainfall and snowfall. Without ice cover on the lakes, wind moves over the open water, picks up moisture and often deposits it in heavy precipitation events called “lake effect.”

For example, a major lake effect storm occurred on December 23, 2022 in the Buffalo, New York area. A record daily snowfall of 22.3 inches was set at the Buffalo Airport. This historic blizzard and lake effect snow event led to widespread power outages, impossible travel, school and government closures and the loss of lives in Niagara and Erie counties.

The lack of Great Lakes ice cover also prohibits or severely limit ice fishing, which is cultural in many areas. For example, the ice fishing harvest of species like lake whitefish, panfish, bass, walleye and yellow perch was high in nearshore areas during the 3-4-month periods of cold winters in 1996, 2009, 2014, and 2015 when ice was thick. In contrast, ice fishing harvest is low when ice cover is low and unstable.

Related:

  • Breaking Up: Ice loss is changing one Anishinaabe fisherman’s relationship with Lake Superior
  • On Michigan’s inland lakes, ice fishing with less ice, and fewer fish

We also know from fishery biologists that thick, stable ice protects fish eggs that incubate over winter and increases their survival. Lake ice serves as a protective barrier from waves for fish eggs and the number of young fish that survive to enter the adult population is known to be higher after cold winters than during warm winters.

In contrast, fish that spawn and rear in Great Lakes tributaries, such as steelhead, suffer higher mortality during cold winters than in warm winters and their production of juvenile fish, called smolts, is reduced. Long, cold winters are known to cause die-offs of fish species like alewife, which are not native to the Great Lakes.

We know from scientific laboratory studies that cool-water fishes such as yellow perch require an extended period of cold temperatures during winter to fully develop their eggs and provide newly hatched larvae with adequate fat reserves that will sustain them until they can find food. Long-term records from 1973–2010 show that the number of young yellow perch that survive to become adults in Lake Erie is low following short, warm winters.

In addition, fishery biologists have noted that during short winters, females spawn at warmer temperatures and produce smaller eggs that both hatch at lower rates and produce smaller larvae than females exposed to long winters.

Related:

  • Lake Superior Winter: Researchers belatedly turn their eyes to the impact of warming winters
  • Four ways Great Lakes winters are changing as scientists search for clues

Lack of Great Lakes ice cover during mild winters will also result in the resuspension of nutrients like phosphorus and nitrogen from sediments in nearshore and shallower areas. This may contribute to summer algal blooms. In contrast, ice cover allows these nutrients to settle out at the bottom of the lakes.

Great Lakes scientists are concerned that winter ecology is a major knowledge gap, and are now developing studies to better understand the importance of winter — and ice — to Great Lakes ecosystems.

“We know that lower Great Lakes ice cover will increase coastal erosion, the frequency of extreme weather, and resuspension of nutrients that may contribute to summer algal blooms, yet there is much uncertainty in terms of climate simulations,” said Dr. Mike McKay, director of University of Windsor’s Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research. “The Great Lakes will continue to warm over the next several decades and despite year-to-year variability, Lake Erie is trending towards an ice-free status during the winter months. Even though we have seen the lakes bounce back from adversity before, less ice cover will be a new normal.”

Catch more news at Great Lakes Now:

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Featured image: MODIS satellite photograph taken of the Great Lakes on March 8, 2023. (Photo Credit: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration)

  • climate change
  • ice
  • ice cover

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Great Lakes Moment: Decreasing Great Lakes ice cover has consequences | Great Lakes Now (2024)

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Great Lakes Moment: Decreasing Great Lakes ice cover has consequences | Great Lakes Now? ›

Lower ice levels on the Great Lakes leaves coastal areas less protected from strong winter storms and waves that can increase coastal erosion and damage lakefront properties. This erosion can, in turn, lead to excessive sedimentation problems and even severe flooding.

What are the impacts of less ice cover on the lakes? ›

Without ice, the lakes' upper levels will likely warm even more quickly than usual, contributing to thermal stratification, in which layers of colder and warmer water form. Less oxygen would make it into the lower, colder and denser levels, which could cause plankton and other organisms to die, some scientists believe.

Is the ice cover of the Great Lakes declining? ›

Annual maximum ice coverage has decreased by approximately 5 percent per decade, according to NOAA's Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory (GLERL). Warmer winter conditions in the Great Lakes region are contributing to more frequent low-ice years.

Are the Great Lakes decreasing? ›

Water levels in the Great Lakes have fluctuated since 1860. Over the last few decades, water levels have declined slightly for most of the Great Lakes (see Figure 1).

What is a major threat to the Great Lakes today? ›

In spite of their majesty, the Great Lakes are fragile and face serious threats from invasive species, toxins, water diversion, wetland destruction, sewage overflows, and climate change.

Will Lake Erie freeze in 2024? ›

As of February 15, 2024, Lake Erie is completely ice free and Lake Ontario has less than 1 percent ice coverage. Read more about these historic low ice levels here. On average, the seasonal maximum ice extent on the Great Lakes is around 53 percent of the lake area, and it occurs in mid-February to early March.

What percentage of the Great Lakes are covered by ice? ›

Maximum ice cover for the year usually peaks in late February or early March and, on average, the Great Lakes experience a basin-wide maximum in annual ice coverage of about 53%. [Check out this Q&A with GLERL scientists that goes into more detail about the causes and impacts of this year's low ice cover.]

What is destroying the Great Lakes? ›

Habitat loss and fragmentation, invasive species, and contaminants impair water quality, threaten wildlife populations, and jeopardize the health and economic vitality of the region.

Which Great lake is most likely to freeze over? ›

The smaller and shallower lakes, like Lake Erie, are more likely to freeze over than the larger and deeper ones, like Lake Superior. However, a complete freeze over all the Great Lakes is rare. The last time this happened was in 1979.

Have any of the Great Lakes ever frozen over? ›

Since the early 1970s, the Great Lakes have a long-term average of 55% ice coverage with certain areas reliably freezing over. In that time, the lakes have surpassed 80% ice coverage a mere five times. The lowest ice coverage was in 2002 when ice coverage was only 9.5%.

What is the biggest problem in the Great Lakes? ›

Threats to the Great Lakes' ecosystems, include invasive species, climate change, pollution, and habitat destruction. Climate change affects water temperatures, weather patterns, and lake levels.

Why don t the Great Lakes run out of water? ›

Great Lakes waters are composed of numerous aquifers (groundwater) that have filled with water over the centuries, waters that flow in the tributaries of the Great Lakes, and waters that fill the lakes themselves.

Where does the water leaving the Great Lakes go? ›

The entire system flows to the Atlantic Ocean via the St. Lawrence River. As it flows from its westernmost point in Duluth, Minnesota to the Atlantic Ocean, the waterway drops in elevation approximately 600 feet.

Which Great lake is the least polluted? ›

Watershed's surface: 209,000 square kms. Lake Superior is the largest, cleanest, and wildest of all the Great Lakes.

Which Great lake is the deepest? ›

Lake Superior is the world's largest freshwater lake by area (31,700 mi2 /82,100 km2). It is also the coldest and deepest of the Great Lakes, with a maximum depth of 406 meters (1,332 feet). By most measures, it is the healthiest of all the Great Lakes.

Were the Great Lakes ever one lake? ›

Lake Ontario came into being, and the Niagara River became Lake Erie's outlet. As the ice sheet retreated into Canada, it temporarily made Lakes Superior, Michigan and Huron into one huge body of water called Lake Nipissing, which had the unusual quality of having three outlets — via the Ottawa-St.

Why is ice important to lakes? ›

Winter ice, covering our lakes, streams, and ponds, isn't just a beautiful surface for skating and ice fishing. It serves an important role in the annual cycles of our freshwater ecology and all the plants and animals that live below the surface.

How does the reduction of ice cover affect climate change? ›

Decreasing snow and ice cover decreases the reflection of sunlight from the Earth's surface (that is, it decreases the Earth's albedo). This increases the amount of light absorbed by the water and land, which increases regional temperatures.

How does surface ice on a lake effect the water below? ›

Most lakes and ponds don't completely freeze because the ice (and eventually snow) on the surface acts to insulate the water below.

What effects does a lack of glacial ice have on wildlife? ›

Animals of the ice need sea ice to survive. Across the polar food web, sea ice loss and warming seas mean massive changes for them. Some are finding their food sources disappearing, some are losing habitat, and almost all are feeling disturbances to the patterns of their lives.

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