Stream and lake water chemistry data for Green Lakes Valley, 1998 - ongoing.
This is a summary of major ion concentrations for lake water at selected depths as well as for the inlets and outlets of Green Lakes 1, 4, and Lake Albion. On some occasions the same samples were also taken from other lakes in the Green Lakes Valley, such as Green Lakes 2, 3 and 5.
more »
« less
- Award ID(s):
- 2224439
- PAR ID:
- 10632809
- Publisher / Repository:
- Environmental Data Initiative
- Date Published:
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
More Like this
-
Abstract Global change may contribute to ecological changes in high-elevation lakes and reservoirs, but a lack of data makes it difficult to evaluate spatiotemporal patterns. Remote sensing imagery can provide more complete records to evaluate whether consistent changes across a broad geographic region are occurring. We used Landsat surface reflectance data to evaluate spatial patterns of contemporary lake color (2010–2020) in 940 lakes in the U.S. Rocky Mountains, a historically understudied area for lake water quality. Intuitively, we found that most of the lakes in the region are blue (66%) and were found in steep-sided watersheds (>22.5°) or alternatively were relatively deep (>4.5 m) with mean annual air temperature (MAAT) <4.5°C. Most green/brown lakes were found in relatively shallow sloped watersheds with MAAT ⩾4.5°C. We extended the analysis of contemporary lake color to evaluate changes in color from 1984 to 2020 for a subset of lakes with the most complete time series ( n = 527). We found limited evidence of lakes shifting from blue to green states, but rather, 55% of the lakes had no trend in lake color. Surprisingly, where lake color was changing, 32% of lakes were trending toward bluer wavelengths, and only 13% shifted toward greener wavelengths. Lakes and reservoirs with the most substantial shifts toward blue wavelengths tended to be in urbanized, human population centers at relatively lower elevations. In contrast, lakes that shifted to greener wavelengths did not relate clearly to any lake or landscape features that we evaluated, though declining winter precipitation and warming summer and fall temperatures may play a role in some systems. Collectively, these results suggest that the interactions between local landscape factors and broader climatic changes can result in heterogeneous, context-dependent changes in lake color.more » « less
-
The Laurentian Great Lakes have substantial influences on regional climatology, particularly with impactful lake-effect snow events. This study examines the snowfall, cloud-inferred snow band morphology, and environment of lake-effect snow days along the southern shore of Lake Michigan for the 1997–2017 period. Suitable days for study were identified based on the presence of lake-effect clouds assessed in a previous study and extended through 2017, combined with an independent classification of likely lake-effect snow days based on independent snowfall data and weather map assessments. The primary goals are to identify lake-effect snow days and evaluate the snowfall distribution and modes of variability, the sensitivity to thermodynamic and flow characteristics within the upstream sounding at Green Bay, WI, and the influences of snowband morphology. Over 300 lake-effect days are identified during the study period, with peak mean snowfall within the lake belt extending from southwest Michigan to northern Indiana. Although multiple lake-effect morphological types are often observed on the same day, the most common snow band morphology is wind parallel bands. Relative to days with wind parallel bands, the shoreline band morphology is more common with a reduced lower-tropospheric zonal wind component within the upstream sounding at Green Bay, WI, as well as higher sea-level pressure and 500-hPa geopotential height anomalies to the north of the Great Lakes. Snowfall is sensitive to band morphology, with higher snowfall for shoreline band structures than for wind parallel bands, especially due south of Lake Michigan. Snowfall is also sensitive to thermodynamic and flow properties, with a greater sensitivity to temperature in southwest Michigan and to flow properties in northwest Indiana.more » « less
-
Beisner, Beatrix E (Ed.)Abstract Eutrophication is increasingly becoming a problem for freshwater lakes. We evaluated the effects of additions nitrate (N as NO3−) and phosphate (P as PO43−) on phytoplankton in a temperate lake reservoir (Lake Murray, South Carolina). High-performance liquid chromatography and ChemTax were used to measure concentrations of microalgal groups in the lake in 2021–2023 and bioassays. The phytoplankton community during the summer months consisted of green algae (37%), diatoms (27%), cryptophytes (20%), cyanobacteria (11%) and dinoflagellates (4%). Bioassays of N (20-μM NaNO3), P (10-μM KH2PO4) and N + P additions were conducted monthly from April to October 2023. All microalgal groups, except cyanobacteria, exhibited nutrient co-limitation with N as the primary limiting nutrient. Similarly, cyanobacteria exhibited co-limitation, but with P as the primary limiting nutrient. Nutrient additions of N + P (but not N or P singularly) also resulted in significant community shifts, with a strong response by green algae. The management implications for this study are that increases in N and P loading and ratio changes in the lake may result in major phytoplankton community changes toward dominance by green algae. However, increasing P loading relative to N may promote cyanobacterial growth over other phytoplankton groups in this lake system.more » « less
An official website of the United States government
