Ouch. Perhaps more man made destruction?
First goal is to find out why and try to remediate. We've already seen dire consequences of changing temperature of other lakes. Lake Tahoe is a huge natural asset. Let's not impact it to the point it becomes a liability.
Why is Lake Tahoe getting warmer so quickly?
Lake Tahoe is warming 15 times more quickly than the historic average rate, threatening to cloud its famous clear blue waters.
Swimmers, look out! California’s Lake Tahoe may be getting warmer, but that isn’t necessarily a good thing for those looking to use the lake for recreation.
Lake Tahoe is warming rapidly – at about 15 times its historic average, according to a new State of the Lake report, a speed that threatens the lake’s famous clarity by changing many aspects of the lake’s ecology.
Lake Tahoe is warming rapidly – at about 15 times its historic average, according to a new State of the Lake report, a speed that threatens the lake’s famous clarity by changing many aspects of the lake’s ecology.
“The
occurrence of rising air temperatures at Lake Tahoe has been known
about for many years now, and with it the warming of the lake,” said
Geoffrey Schladow, of Tahoe Environmental Research Center (TERC) at the
University of California Davis, in a press release. “What is different
this year is that we are seeing more aspects of the lake’s internal
physics changing, and that is bound to alter the ecology.”
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Scientists say that what is happening at Lake
Tahoe is not just alarming for those who love and use the lake for
recreation, but it is also alarming for anybody concerned about world
climate change and the impact that changing temperatures could have on
the beauty of natural resources.
“While Lake Tahoe is unique, the
forces and processes that shape it are the same as those acting in most
natural ecosystems,” wrote TERC in the report. “As such, Lake Tahoe is
an indicator for other systems both in the western U.S. and worldwide.”
When
scientists first started keeping records on Lake Tahoe’s water
temperature in 1970, the lake averaged 50.3 degrees Fahrenheit, year
round. In 2015, the lake water averaged 53.3 degrees. While the increase
may seem insignificant, much of the warming has occurred in the past
decade and a half, a sign that concerns scientists.
Increasing
water temperatures are likely tied to changing air temperatures – the
northwest shore of the lake has seen a daily air temperature increase of
4.3 degrees F, on average, since 1916.
Historically,
different temperature waters mingle in the lake’s deeps during the
winter, “mixing” the water and leading to a clearer view, according to
the Associated Press. But the lake failed to mix at its fullest depth
this year, which researchers attribute to warmer inflows of water.
As a result, water clarity fell to 73.1 feet last year, a nearly five-foot clarity decrease over previous years.
Water
“mixing” is not the only the factor that can contribute to the lake’s
clarity. Fertilizer use in nearby areas and runoff can also muddy the
waters. Efforts over the past couple decades to reduce fertilizer use
(the nitrogen and phosphorus in many fertilizers can lead to algae
growth) and better capture water runoff from storms have improved lake
clarity from its lowest point in 1997.
Nationally, swimmers and others who use bodies of water for recreation have seen algal blooms grow and spread in recent years. Longer algal blooms have been linked to climate change, as algae prefers warmer water, Joseph Dussault reported for The Christian Science Monitor.
Still, local residents can do their part
to keep Lake Tahoe as healthy as possible. Stormwater collection and
attention to the lake’s natural filtration systems can help keep harmful
substances that accelerate algae growth, such as phosphates, out of the
lake.
"There's not much we can do to influence global
climate change," the director of the League to Save Lake Tahoe, Darcie
Goodman Collins, told the East Bay Times. "But we can influence the
lake's health."
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