Abstract. In large lakes subject to the Coriolis force, basin-scale
gyres and mesoscale eddies, i.e. rotating coherent water masses, play a key
role in spreading biochemical materials and energy throughout the lake. In
order to assess the spatial and temporal extent of gyres and eddies, their
dynamics and vertical structure, as well as to validate their prediction in
numerical simulation results, detailed transect field observations are
needed. However, at present it is difficult to forecast when and where such
transect field observations should be taken. To overcome this problem, a
novel procedure combining 3D numerical simulations, statistical analyses,
and remote sensing data was developed that permits determination of the
spatial and temporal patterns of basin-scale gyres during different seasons.
The proposed gyre identification procedure consists of four steps: (i) data
pre-processing, (ii) extracting dominant patterns using empirical orthogonal
function (EOF) analysis of Okubo–Weiss parameter fields, (iii) defining the
3D structure of the gyre, and (iv) finding the correlation between the
dominant gyre pattern and environmental forcing. The efficiency and
robustness of the proposed procedure was validated in Lake Geneva. For the
first time in a lake, detailed field evidence of the existence of
basin-scale gyres and (sub)mesoscale eddies was provided by data collected
along transects whose locations were predetermined by the proposed
procedure. The close correspondence between field observations and detailed
numerical results further confirmed the validity of the model for capturing
large-scale current circulations as well as (sub)mesoscale eddies. The
results also indicated that the horizontal gyre motion is mainly determined
by wind stress, whereas the vertical current structure, which is influenced
by the gyre flow field, primarily depends on thermocline depth and strength.
The procedure can be applied to other large lakes and can be extended to the
interaction of biological–chemical–physical processes.
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