The phytoplankton of an enriched, soft-water lakel subject to intermittent hydraulic flushing (Grasmere, English Lake District)

This paper describes some characteristic features of the phytoplankton of Grasmere, one of the smaller of the principal lakes of the English Lake District, and attempts to relate these to distinctive physical and chemical properties of the lake. Quantitative data presented herein are derived from 5-m vertical column samples, collected with a flexible polyethylene hose close to the deepest point of Grasmere, generally at intervals of 14 days ( 7 days from 1972 to 1978, inclusive). The study concludes that although Grasmere has been subject to increased phosphorus-loading and has quickly developed many features associated with eutrophication, the composition of its plankton has retained the characteristics of a mesotrophic, soft-water lake: a vernal diatom maximum, generally dominated by Asterionella, is followed by summer growths of nanoplanktonic species, of various colonial Chlorophyceae, before a substantial return to Asterionella-dominance in the autumn.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Reynolds, C.S., Lund, J.W.G.
Format: monograph biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Freshwater Biological Association 1982
Subjects:Biology, Ecology, Limnology, Freshwater Lakes, Diatoms, Phytoplankton, Limnological data, Seasonal distribution, Biomass, Population dynamics, Eutrophication, England, Grasmere Lake,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/22651
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