Hydrology, Vol. 12, Pages 263: Outdoor Ice Rinks in Ontario, Canada—An Oversimplified Model for Ice Water Equivalent and Operational Duration to Evaluate Changing Climate


Hydrology, Vol. 12, Pages 263: Outdoor Ice Rinks in Ontario, Canada—An Oversimplified Model for Ice Water Equivalent and Operational Duration to Evaluate Changing Climate

Hydrology doi: 10.3390/hydrology12100263

Authors:
Huaxia Yao
Steven R. Fassnacht

Outdoor ice rinks have long been a staple for inexpensive exercise and entertainment in cold environments. However, the possible deterioration of or impact on outdoor ice rinks from a changing climate is poorly understood due to no or little monitoring of data of such facilities. To investigate long-term changes in ice rinks over recent decades, an energy-balance-based ice rink model (with three versions considering precipitation and melt) was applied to a simulated ice rink for two representative area—Dorset of south-central Ontario and the Experimental Lakes Area (ELA) of northwestern Ontario, Canada. The model was calibrated and tested using four-year ice rink data (since limited data are available) and applied to a 40-year period starting in 1978 to reproduce the dates of rink-on and rink-off, rink duration in a season, and ice water equivalent under daily climate inputs, and to illustrate any changing trend in these variables, i.e., the ice rink responses to changed climate. Results showed no clear trend in any ice rink features over four decades, attributed to winter temperature that did not increase substantially (a weak driver), no change in events of rain-on-ice and snowfall-on-rink, and reduced wind speed (possibly slowing ice melting). This is the first trial of a physically based rink model to evaluate outdoor ice rinks. More in situ monitoring and in-depth modelling are necessary, and this model can help guide the monitoring.



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Huaxia Yao www.mdpi.com