TY - JOUR
T1 - Four decades of satellite observations reveal climate-driven shifts and spatial heterogeneity in shallow lake Chlorophyll-a dynamics
AU - Li, Huan
AU - Somogyi, Boglárka
AU - Chen, Xiaona
AU - Wan, Wei
AU - Duan, Zheng
AU - Woolway, R Iestyn
AU - Tóth, Viktor R
PY - 2025/11/11
Y1 - 2025/11/11
N2 - Shallow lakes worldwide face escalating pressures from eutrophication and climate change, yet comprehensive monitoring of Chlorophyll-a (Chl-a) spatiotemporal dynamics remains challenging due to the high costs and logistical constraints of traditional sampling approaches across large, heterogeneous water bodies. Lake Balaton, a large shallow lake system (80 km long, 7 km wide, 3.7 m mean depth) in Central Europe, exemplifies these monitoring challenges while serving as a representative system for understanding climate-driven changes in temperate shallow lakes. Despite decades of in-situ measurements along the lake's centerline, fine-scale spatial patterns and long-term temporal trends in Chl-a remain poorly characterized due to sparse samplings. Using a machine-learning-derived optical remote sensing dataset (1984-2023) at 30 m spatial resolution, we conducted comprehensive spatiotemporal analysis of Chl-a dynamics and examined relationships with bathymetry, nutrient loading, and light availability features. Our analysis reveals an exponential west-to-east decline in Chl-a concentrations with distance from the primary nutrient source, characterized by a consistent decay rate of 0.04-0.06 km (typically 0.05 km ). Littoral zones consistently exhibited 1.3-2.8 times higher optical Chl-a concentrations than pelagic zones, reflecting integrated signals from phytoplankton, benthic algae, and submerged macrophytes. Phenological analysis demonstrated significant climate-driven shifts, with peak Chl-a timing advancing by 20 days over the study period and growing season onset occurring 10 days earlier, consistent with regional warming trends. These findings provide a transferable framework for satellite-based water quality monitoring in shallow lake systems and demonstrate the critical importance of accounting for spatial heterogeneity and climate-driven temporal shifts in lake management strategies globally. [Abstract copyright: Copyright © 2025. Published by Elsevier Ltd.]
AB - Shallow lakes worldwide face escalating pressures from eutrophication and climate change, yet comprehensive monitoring of Chlorophyll-a (Chl-a) spatiotemporal dynamics remains challenging due to the high costs and logistical constraints of traditional sampling approaches across large, heterogeneous water bodies. Lake Balaton, a large shallow lake system (80 km long, 7 km wide, 3.7 m mean depth) in Central Europe, exemplifies these monitoring challenges while serving as a representative system for understanding climate-driven changes in temperate shallow lakes. Despite decades of in-situ measurements along the lake's centerline, fine-scale spatial patterns and long-term temporal trends in Chl-a remain poorly characterized due to sparse samplings. Using a machine-learning-derived optical remote sensing dataset (1984-2023) at 30 m spatial resolution, we conducted comprehensive spatiotemporal analysis of Chl-a dynamics and examined relationships with bathymetry, nutrient loading, and light availability features. Our analysis reveals an exponential west-to-east decline in Chl-a concentrations with distance from the primary nutrient source, characterized by a consistent decay rate of 0.04-0.06 km (typically 0.05 km ). Littoral zones consistently exhibited 1.3-2.8 times higher optical Chl-a concentrations than pelagic zones, reflecting integrated signals from phytoplankton, benthic algae, and submerged macrophytes. Phenological analysis demonstrated significant climate-driven shifts, with peak Chl-a timing advancing by 20 days over the study period and growing season onset occurring 10 days earlier, consistent with regional warming trends. These findings provide a transferable framework for satellite-based water quality monitoring in shallow lake systems and demonstrate the critical importance of accounting for spatial heterogeneity and climate-driven temporal shifts in lake management strategies globally. [Abstract copyright: Copyright © 2025. Published by Elsevier Ltd.]
KW - Asynchronous change
KW - Water quality
KW - Section profile
KW - Littoral and pelagic zones
KW - Ecological management
U2 - 10.1016/j.watres.2025.124925
DO - 10.1016/j.watres.2025.124925
M3 - Article
C2 - 41223622
SN - 0043-1354
VL - 289
JO - Water research
JF - Water research
IS - Pt B
M1 - 124925
ER -