scholarly journals Kolme kertomusta järviemme tilasta

2018 ◽  
Vol 47 (1) ◽  
pp. 50-61
Author(s):  
Kari-Matti Vuori ◽  
Kristiina Korjonen-Kuusipuro

Finland is officially marketed as a land of a thousand clean lakes, but people’s concerns on negative trends is common. We used questionnaires and interviews to gather information on people’s experiences on how lakes have been changed, and compared the experiences with limnological research results and administrative lake classifications. Both human observations and limnological evidence detected negative changes in lake ecosystem quality during the past 30-50 years, whereas the administrative lake classification considered lakes to be mainly in good/excellent quality. In addition, small lakes with severe ecosystem changes reported by people, were seldom covered by classification. People’s observations and limnological measurements revealed independent and identical information on the trends in water quality, whereas much of the official lake classification is based on inadequate data and lack of observations on lake littoral areas. Thus, we suggest that people’s everyday experiences should be collected and analyzed more systematically in lake quality assessment processes.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Jakob Parrish

<p>Decreasing water quality of lakes as a result of anthropogenic landuse and specifically agricultural intensification is well documented in New Zealand. However, monitoring records of lake health are typically short, only commencing once signs of lake deterioration are observed. The shortness of the instrumental record precludes a detailed understanding of the relationship between landuse change, lake ecosystem trajectories and the effectiveness of mitigation strategies such as riparian planting. Paleolimnological reconstruction from sediment cores has the potential to develop high-resolution time series that may extend lake monitoring centuries into the past. This thesis uses paleoenvironmental reconstruction to investigate lake ecosystem change and water quality in Lake Nganoke, Wairarapa, New Zealand as a result of landuse intensification. The primary aim of this thesis is to reconstruct the past environment of Lake Nganoke from a pre-human reference state to the current day to assess: 1) how increased nutrient fluxes associated with landuse intensification have impacted the lake ecosystem; and 2) the ability of riparian zones to buffer these fluxes. The reconstruction was achieved using a multi proxy approach with pre and post-human environments of Lake Nganoke characterised using Palynology, geochemistry, eDNA and hyperspectral scanning.  Māori land clearance was identified at ~AD 1450 (95% CI: AD 1417-1551). The appearance of Pinus pollen and increases in fertilisation and stocking rates placed European arrival at ~AD 1850 (95% CI: 1809 - 1870), while intensification of agricultural landuse occurred post ~AD 1950 (95% CI: 1948 - 1964). The prehuman environment of Lake Nganoke experienced little change, with the catchment dominated by tall trees and likely heavily forested. The lake ecosystem and water quality during this time showed little to no change, with algal productivity likely driven by a constant input of natural nutrients. Post Māori arrival, algal productivity was reduced suggesting an increase in water quality likely driven by added lake marginal plants providing a riparian buffer to terrestrially derived nutrients. Lake productivity increased dramatically post European arrival ~AD 1850, coeval with an increase in sediment Cd, suggesting that fertilisation may have driven a decline in water quality. Further increases in fertilisation and stocking rates indicate additional agricultural nutrient fluxes entering Lake Nganoke in AD 1950 when agriculture intensified. Abundances in denitrifying Gammaproteobacteria indicate increases in nutrient loading while bloom forming Cyanobacteria peak ~AD 2000 before declining till present. Riparian planting following Māori arrival appears sufficient to buffer the lake against increased terrestrial nutrient fluxes associated with land clearing. However, a riparian zone that covers the majority of the catchment post European settlement was inadequate in altering the lake’s degrading ecosystem and water quality trajectory.</p>


2016 ◽  
Vol 75 (s2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marina M. Manca ◽  
Carla Bonacina ◽  
Norman D. Yan

The idea of launching another special issue of the Journal of limnology on Lake Orta was born in 2014, on the 25<sup>th</sup> anniversary of its liming intervention, during an International symposium on Lake Orta organized and hosted by the Pallanza Institute (<a href="http://www.ise.cnr.it/vb">http://www.ise.cnr.it/vb</a>). The conference did not simply celebrate the past. While the liming of Lake Orta was undoubtedly a great national and international success, the speakers at the conference, instead sought to enlarge and deepen knowledge of patterns and mechanisms of lake ecosystem responses to the water quality improvements, or chemical recovery, that accompanied Lake Orta’s liming.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Jakob Parrish

<p>Decreasing water quality of lakes as a result of anthropogenic landuse and specifically agricultural intensification is well documented in New Zealand. However, monitoring records of lake health are typically short, only commencing once signs of lake deterioration are observed. The shortness of the instrumental record precludes a detailed understanding of the relationship between landuse change, lake ecosystem trajectories and the effectiveness of mitigation strategies such as riparian planting. Paleolimnological reconstruction from sediment cores has the potential to develop high-resolution time series that may extend lake monitoring centuries into the past. This thesis uses paleoenvironmental reconstruction to investigate lake ecosystem change and water quality in Lake Nganoke, Wairarapa, New Zealand as a result of landuse intensification. The primary aim of this thesis is to reconstruct the past environment of Lake Nganoke from a pre-human reference state to the current day to assess: 1) how increased nutrient fluxes associated with landuse intensification have impacted the lake ecosystem; and 2) the ability of riparian zones to buffer these fluxes. The reconstruction was achieved using a multi proxy approach with pre and post-human environments of Lake Nganoke characterised using Palynology, geochemistry, eDNA and hyperspectral scanning.  Māori land clearance was identified at ~AD 1450 (95% CI: AD 1417-1551). The appearance of Pinus pollen and increases in fertilisation and stocking rates placed European arrival at ~AD 1850 (95% CI: 1809 - 1870), while intensification of agricultural landuse occurred post ~AD 1950 (95% CI: 1948 - 1964). The prehuman environment of Lake Nganoke experienced little change, with the catchment dominated by tall trees and likely heavily forested. The lake ecosystem and water quality during this time showed little to no change, with algal productivity likely driven by a constant input of natural nutrients. Post Māori arrival, algal productivity was reduced suggesting an increase in water quality likely driven by added lake marginal plants providing a riparian buffer to terrestrially derived nutrients. Lake productivity increased dramatically post European arrival ~AD 1850, coeval with an increase in sediment Cd, suggesting that fertilisation may have driven a decline in water quality. Further increases in fertilisation and stocking rates indicate additional agricultural nutrient fluxes entering Lake Nganoke in AD 1950 when agriculture intensified. Abundances in denitrifying Gammaproteobacteria indicate increases in nutrient loading while bloom forming Cyanobacteria peak ~AD 2000 before declining till present. Riparian planting following Māori arrival appears sufficient to buffer the lake against increased terrestrial nutrient fluxes associated with land clearing. However, a riparian zone that covers the majority of the catchment post European settlement was inadequate in altering the lake’s degrading ecosystem and water quality trajectory.</p>


2011 ◽  
Vol 4 (5) ◽  
pp. 70-72
Author(s):  
Cristina Roşu ◽  
◽  
Ioana Piştea ◽  
Carmen Roba ◽  
Mihaela Mihu ◽  
...  

2009 ◽  
Vol 45 (5) ◽  
pp. 3-14
Author(s):  
N. G. Sheveleva ◽  
I. V. Arov ◽  
Ye. A. Misharina

Author(s):  
B.V. Suresh Kumar ◽  
◽  
R.K. Sunil Kumar ◽  
K.N. Prakash Narasimha ◽  
◽  
...  

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