Science Inventory

LAKE-WIDE SEASONAL CHANGES IN LIMNOLOGICAL CONDITIONS IN LAKE MICHIGAN IN 1976

Citation:

Bartone, C. AND C. Schelske. LAKE-WIDE SEASONAL CHANGES IN LIMNOLOGICAL CONDITIONS IN LAKE MICHIGAN IN 1976. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C., EPA/600/J-82/389 (NTIS PB84102441), 1982.

Description:

Data collected on lake-wide cruises in 1976 were used to study seasonal and vertical variations in water temperature, transparency, chlorophyll a, and nutrients in Lake Michigan. Data were analyzed according to subsets corresponding to the northern and southern open lake. Comparisons (t-tests) of data from the open lake indicated that the average water temperature was cooler and average water transparency was greater in the northern lake than in the southern, but with the exception of total phosphorus, average nutrient concentrations did not differ between the northern and southern parts. It was found that physical-chemical characteristics of nearshore and Straits of Mackinac stations differed significantly from open lake stations. Seasonal phytoplankton dynamics in the open lake were related to seasonal and vertical changes in silica and nitrate nitrogen. The spring phytoplankton bloom occurred before the lake was strongly stratified thermally. After thermal stratification was well developed, epilimnetic concentrations of chlorophyll a decreased, probably due to some combination of nutrient limitation and zooplankton grazing, and maximum chlorophyll a concentrations were found below the thermocline. (Copyright Internat Assoc. Great Lakes Res., 1982.)

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( REPORT )
Product Published Date:12/31/1982
Record Last Revised:12/22/2005
Record ID: 48715