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research article

Seasonality modulates wind-driven mixing pathways in a large lake

Fernandez Castro, Bieito  
•
Bouffard, Damien
•
Troy, Cary
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October 12, 2021
Communications Earth & Environment

Turbulent mixing controls the vertical transfer of heat, gases and nutrients in stratified water bodies, shaping their response to environmental forcing. Nevertheless, due to technical limitations, the redistribution of wind-derived energy fuelling turbulence within stratified lakes has only been mapped over short (sub-annual) timescales. Here we present a year-round observational record of energy fluxes in the large Lake Geneva. Contrary to the standing view, we show that the benthic layers are the main locus for turbulent mixing only during winter. Instead, most turbulent mixing occurs in the water-column interior during the stratified summer season, when the co-occurrence of thermal stability and lighter winds weakens near-sediment currents. Since stratified conditions are becoming more prevalent -possibly reducing turbulent fluxes in deep benthic environments-, these results contribute to the ongoing efforts to anticipate the effects of climate change on freshwater quality and ecosystem services in large lakes.

During the summer season, turbulent mixing in Lake Geneva is strongest in the interior water-column because stratification limits the reach of wind-driven mixing, suggest meteorological, hydrodynamic and turbulence measurements over a full year.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/s43247-021-00288-3
Web of Science ID

WOS:000706726200001

Author(s)
Fernandez Castro, Bieito  
Bouffard, Damien
Troy, Cary
Ulloa, Hugo N.  
Piccolroaz, Sebastiano  
Sepulveda Steiner, Oscar  
Chmiel, Hannah E.
Serra Moncadas, Lucas
Lavanchy, Sebastien  
Wuest, Alfred  
Date Issued

2021-10-12

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE

Published in
Communications Earth & Environment
Volume

2

Issue

1

Start page

215

Subjects

Environmental Sciences

•

Geosciences, Multidisciplinary

•

Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences

•

Environmental Sciences & Ecology

•

Geology

•

bottom boundary-layer

•

internal waves

•

temperate lake

•

thermal structure

•

climate-change

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gravity-waves

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energy

•

stratification

•

dissipation

•

dynamics

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
APHYS  
Available on Infoscience
November 6, 2021
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/182899
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