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Journal ArticleDOI

A trophic state index for lakes1

Robert E. Carlson
- 01 Mar 1977 - 
- Vol. 22, Iss: 2, pp 361-369
TLDR
A numerical trophic state index for lakes has been developed that incorporates most lakes in a scale of 0 to 100, which represents a doubling in algal biomass as well as various measures of biomass or production.
Abstract
A numerical trophic state index for lakes has been developed that incorporates most lakes in a scale of 0 to 100. Each major division ( 10, 20, 30, etc. ) represents a doubling in algal biomass. The index number can bc calculated from any of several parameters, including Secchi disk transparency, chlorophyll, and total phosphorus. My purpose here is to present a new approach to the trophic classification of lakes. This new approach was developed because of frustration in communicating to the public both the current nature or status of lakes and their future condition after restoration when the traditional trophic classification system is used. The system presented hcrc, termed a trophic state index (TSI), involves new methods both of defining trophic status and of determining that status in lakes. All trophic classification is based on the division of the trophic continuum, howcvcr this is defined, into a series of classes termed trophic states. Traditional systems divide the continuum into three classes: oligotrophic, mesotrophic, and cutrophic. There is often no clear delineation of these divisions. Determinations of trophic state are made from examination of several diverse criteria, such as shape of the oxygen curve, species composition of the bottom fauna or of the phytoplankton, conccntrations of nutrients, and various measures of biomass or production. Although each changes from oligotrophy to eutrophy, the changes do not occur at sharply defined places, nor do they all occur at the same place or at the same rate. Some lakes may be considered oligotrophic by one criterion and eutrophic by another; this problem is

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Citations
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Can we stop the degradation of lakes? Innovative approaches in lake restoration

TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied an urban, flow-through lake with a large total catchment area, in the context of implementing complex protection and restoration methods in the shoreline zone and within the lake basin.
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Impacts of different drains on the seawater quality of El-Mex bay (Alexandria, Egypt)

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed seven samples from El Mex bay and four samples from drains and revealed that pH, salinity, dissolved oxygen, oxidizable organic matter, biological oxygen demand, and chlorophylls-a,b,c, were in the ranges 7.16-8.97; 0.3-42.04; ND-22.85, 0.28−28−22.42; and 0.11-40.55 µg/L, respectively.
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Four-Year Study on Phytoplankton Biodiversity in a Small Hypertrophic Lake Affected by Water Blooms of Toxigenic Cyanobacteria

TL;DR: In a shallow hypertrophic lake, species richness of phytoplankton was very high (174-223 taxa, yearly) but values of Shannon-Weaver index were very low (0.04-1.38) as mentioned in this paper.
OtherDOI

Sediment-Deposition Rates and Organic Compounds in Bottom Sediment at Four Sites in Lake Mead, Nevada, May 1998

TL;DR: In 1998, the U.S. Geological Survey in cooperation with the University of Nevada Las Vegas investigated rates of sediment deposition and concentrations of selected synthetic organic compounds at four sites in Lake Mead.
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The Impact of Water Chemistry on Zooplankton Occurrence in Two Types (Field versus Forest) of Small Water Bodies

TL;DR: Rotifers (especially those equipped with morphological adaptations againt predators) remained in the open water despite the presence of fish, and crustacean densities rose along the heterogeneity gradient of a habitat, which indicates the best refuge conditions in the most complex habitat during the daylight-hours in the ponds with fish presence.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The phosphorus‐chlorophyll relationship in lakes1,2

TL;DR: In this article, data for summer chlorophyll and spring total phosphorus concentration were collected from 19 lakes in southern Ontario and combined with data reported in the literature for other North American lakes to produce a regression line that can be used to predict the average summer CHP from a single measurement of phosphorus concentration at spring overturn.
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental control of photosynthesis in the sea

TL;DR: In this article, a theoretical equation for the photosynthesis-light relation is developed which includes the effects of inhibition in intense light, assuming that phytoplankton adapts to seasonal light changes and that nutrient deficiency affects the carbon:chlorophyll ratio of natural phyto-ankton populations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phosphorus, Nitrogen, and Algae in Lake Washington after Diversion of Sewage

TL;DR: After diversion of sewage effluent from Lake Washington, winter concentrations of phosphate and nitrate decreased at different rates, but nitrate remained at more than 80 percent of the 1963 value and free carbon dioxide and alkalinity remained relatively high.