
sarce
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 16, 2013
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Found this article interesting.
https://news.wisc.edu/tiny-trout-st...species-are-bucking-one-climate-change-trend/
"Jensen says this development may have a lot to do with how climate change is reshaping our winters. Typically, winter months are a period of very slow growth for fish. Now, however, ice cover durations are shrinking as water temperatures stay warmer longer into the fall and warm up sooner in spring. The end result could be longer growing seasons for fish, and increased growth rates in aquatic ecosystems throughout the northern hemisphere, Jensen says."
I've wondered about this recently. If most warming compared to average is occuring in winter, it makes sense that the trout growing season is longer. I should note they say that in Wisconsin, warming temperature is benefitting browns and harming brook trout.
There are a lot of projections out there for where air temperature will be in 100 years. Let's say you have on average, an 8F increase in air temps compared to today in the year 2120. That could mean a +12 increase the coldest 6 months of the year and only a +4 increase the warmest 6 months. Then you have to filter those increases down to what the impact on water temp will be, it's not a 1:1 relationship. Especially if riparian cover increases along a given stream. Might be wishful thinking, but it's something I think about often. Seems like up to a certain point of warming, there may be benefits to trout in the areas that are currently coldest (but likely also a loss of populations currently on the fringe). It could create a false sense that everything's fine in the short term.
https://news.wisc.edu/tiny-trout-st...species-are-bucking-one-climate-change-trend/
"Jensen says this development may have a lot to do with how climate change is reshaping our winters. Typically, winter months are a period of very slow growth for fish. Now, however, ice cover durations are shrinking as water temperatures stay warmer longer into the fall and warm up sooner in spring. The end result could be longer growing seasons for fish, and increased growth rates in aquatic ecosystems throughout the northern hemisphere, Jensen says."
I've wondered about this recently. If most warming compared to average is occuring in winter, it makes sense that the trout growing season is longer. I should note they say that in Wisconsin, warming temperature is benefitting browns and harming brook trout.
There are a lot of projections out there for where air temperature will be in 100 years. Let's say you have on average, an 8F increase in air temps compared to today in the year 2120. That could mean a +12 increase the coldest 6 months of the year and only a +4 increase the warmest 6 months. Then you have to filter those increases down to what the impact on water temp will be, it's not a 1:1 relationship. Especially if riparian cover increases along a given stream. Might be wishful thinking, but it's something I think about often. Seems like up to a certain point of warming, there may be benefits to trout in the areas that are currently coldest (but likely also a loss of populations currently on the fringe). It could create a false sense that everything's fine in the short term.