Great Lakes Ice Cover Most Extensive in 20 Years

Covering about 88 percent of the lakes on February 13, the ice has implications for water levels, shipping and fisheries.

Lake Michigan ice caves

Photo ©J. Carl Ganter / Circle of Blue
Wind and waves have created otherworldly ice formations along the shores of Lake Michigan near Leland, Mich. Click image to enlarge.

By Codi Kozacek
Circle of Blue

Ice conditions on the five Great Lakes are the strongest they have been in years, extending across more surface area than in any year since 1994, according to measurements compiled by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory. As of February 13, ice covered 88 percent of the lakes as a whole. Lake Superior and Lake Huron were both approximately 95 percent covered, while Lake Michigan was 82 percent covered, Lake Erie was 96 percent covered and Lake Ontario was 43 percent covered.

In the past four years, ice cover has been consistently below the long-term average of 51.4 percent coverage, and three of the lowest ice cover years recorded have occurred in the last 20 years, raising concerns about larger climate changes in the region. Record low water levels on Lake Michigan and Huron last January were in part attributed to low ice cover and subsequent increases in evaporation. This year, extended periods of cold weather led to earlier and more extensive ice formation on the lakes.

“One thing different [this year] is there was an earlier start to the ice season because of the temperatures in early fall and winter,” George Leshkevich, a physical scientist at NOAA GLERL’s Coastwatch program, told Circle of Blue. “We started having ice growing on the lakes—at least in reports from bays and harbor areas—as early as the end of November as opposed to normally in mid-December. With that first arctic vortex with the extended cold temperatures, that ice kept growing.”

Video by Corban Shaw, Glenn Petersen and J. Carl Ganter / Petersen Productions for Circle of Blue
The northern Michigan winter this year, with its Arctic cold and persistent snow, has locked Lake Michigan’s shoreline in towering walls of ice. It’s a frozen grip. The gales of January and the calmer winds of February, shifting from stout to steady, pulled the water and pushed the ice until it careened upward and outward, forming pregnant walls and bridges that birthed big caves. Click image to enlarge.

Extended ice cover has implications for lake levels, fisheries, regional weather, and the shipping industry. Ice curbs evaporation from open water, for example, acting as a “stabilizer” for water levels and reducing the amount of lake effect snow, according to Leshkevich. If ice persists late into spring, it can also have a cooling effect on near-shore environments, such as major fruit producing areas along the western coast of Michigan. The ice can also provide benefits for certain fisheries.

“There are certain species like whitefish, especially in Lake Michigan and Lake Superior, that require stable ice cover over their spawning beds, or else the spawning bed is susceptible to winter storms,” Leshkevich said. “Protecting the spawning beds can help fish recruitment for the next season.”

The Great Lakes shipping industry has already felt the effects of the ice this season. In an effort to keep channels open for ships, U.S. Coast Guard ice breakers on the lakes have logged nearly four times the 5-year average of ice-breaking hours in the first quarter of fiscal year 2014. In the Straits of Mackinac, a major shipping pathway, ice in early February was more than two feet thick in some places.
Ice cover is highly variable depending on air temperatures—a recent warming spell this week, for example, reduced total ice cover to about 80 percent—and year to year variation appears to be increasing as well, Leshkevich said. Nonetheless, overall trends appear to point to decreasing ice cover.

“From the 40 years of records that we have, if you plot the maximum ice cover for each year, it goes up and down, is variable,” he said. “But if you draw a trend line through it, it is downward. This year is going to change that trend line a little bit, but it will still probably be trending downwards. I think the thing is from the late 1990s, about 1998 which was an El Niño year, it seems to become more variable.”

Lake Michigan ice caves

Photo ©J. Carl Ganter / Circle of Blue
David Pelizzari and his dog, Seena, explore ice caves south of Leland, Michigan.
Lake Michigan ice caves

Photo ©J. Carl Ganter / Circle of Blue
Ice stretches to the horizon from the shores of Lake Michigan near Leland, Mich.
Lake Michigan ice caves

Photo ©J. Carl Ganter / Circle of Blue
Large ice caves have formed off the shores of Lake Michigan near Leland, Mich.
Lake Michigan ice caves

Photo ©J. Carl Ganter / Circle of Blue
Footprints in the snow off the shore of Leland, Mich.
Lake Michigan ice caves

Photo ©J. Carl Ganter / Circle of Blue
Ice formations on Lake Michigan off the shore of Leland, Mich.
Lake Michigan ice caves

Photo ©J. Carl Ganter / Circle of Blue
Ice formations on Lake Michigan off the shore of Leland, Mich.
Lake Michigan ice caves

Photo ©J. Carl Ganter / Circle of Blue
A Lake Michigan sunset over ice formations off the shore of Leland, Mich.
Lake Michigan ice caves

Photo ©J. Carl Ganter / Circle of Blue
Corban Shaw snowshoes on the ice of a frozen Lake Michigan near Leland, Mich.
Lake Michigan ice caves

Photo ©J. Carl Ganter / Circle of Blue
Filmmaker Glen Petersen aligns a sunset shot near Leland, Mich.
Lake Michigan ice caves

Photo ©J. Carl Ganter / Circle of Blue
Filmmaker Glen Petersen shoots the ice formations along the shores of Lake Michigan near Leland, Mich.
Lake Michigan ice caves

Photo ©J. Carl Ganter / Circle of Blue
A Lake Michigan sunset near Leland, Mich.
Lake Michigan ice caves

Photo ©J. Carl Ganter / Circle of Blue
An ice cave formed by wind and waves on Lake Michigan near Leland, Mich.
Lake Michigan ice caves

Photo ©J. Carl Ganter / Circle of Blue
Traverse City, Mich., resident David Pelizzari walks his dog along the frozen ice flows of Lake Michigan just south of Leland, Mich. North Manitou Island appears in the background.
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