Science Inventory

EVALUATION OF AERATION/CIRCULATION AS A LAKE RESTORATION TECHNIQUE

Citation:

Pastorok, R., T. Ginn, AND M. Lorenzen. EVALUATION OF AERATION/CIRCULATION AS A LAKE RESTORATION TECHNIQUE. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C., EPA/600/3-81/014 (NTIS PB81191884), 1981.

Description:

Artificial circulation and hypolimnetic aeration are management techniques for oxygenating eutrophic lakes subject to water quality problems, algal blooms, and fishkills. Artificial circulation is achieved by injecting diffused air into lower waters, by mechanial pumping of water from one depth stratum to another, or by inducing turbulence at the surface using large axial-flow pumps. In contrast, hypolimnetic aeration by air or oxygen injection affects primarily bottom waters. In some instances low dissolved oxygen concentrations persist in the metalimnion. In general, both methods lower the concentrations of reduced compounds in lake waters, providing benefits for water supply systems. Aeration may cause supersaturation of nitrogen gas, thereby raising the potential danger of gas bubble disease in downstream fishes.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( REPORT )
Product Published Date:02/28/1981
Record Last Revised:12/22/2005
Record ID: 45821