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Life and Times of Five Saskatchewan Saline Meromictic Lakes
Author(s) -
Hammer U. Theodore
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
internationale revue der gesamten hydrobiologie und hydrographie
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.524
H-Index - 52
eISSN - 1522-2632
pISSN - 0020-9309
DOI - 10.1002/iroh.19940790209
Subject(s) - limnology , snowmelt , precipitation , surface runoff , hydrology (agriculture) , geology , environmental science , oceanography , ecology , biology , geography , meteorology , geotechnical engineering
Five closed saline lakes near Humboldt, Saskatchewan, were found to be meromictic. Two of these lakes (Waldsea, Deadmoose) were first discovered to be meromictic in the early 1970s and three (Arthur, Marie, Sayer) in 1985. The origin of their meromixis is ectogenic. One of the lakes, Waldsea, had surface salinities far higher in 1960–1961 than those of 1970 or later and as high as that of the monimolimnion occasionally was from 1970 to the present. During the late 1960s to 1980 the lake level of Waldsea rose four metres as a result of higher than normal snowpacks and subsequent high snowmelt runoff. Endogenic processes of freezing out of salts from the upper metre during ice formation and precipitation of sodium sulphate during autumn cooling also promote meromixis. The lakes which are located in depressions in a relatively flat topography are very exposed to periodic high velocity westerly winds. Although Deadmoose and Waldsea lakes are relatively deep, Arthur, Marie and Sayer lakes have maximum depths of only three to five metres. Meromixis has persisted until the present in three lakes but Marie and Arthur lakes became holomictic during the autumn of 1988, a severe drought year. Bacterial plates were prominent in Waldsea, Deadmoose and Sayer lakes. BChl‐ a and BChl‐ d were present in 1988 with maxima of 2652 mg · m −3 BChl‐ a and 4290 mg · m −3 BChl‐ d in Sayer Lake. BChl‐ a virtually disappeared in subsequent years.

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