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Lake & Reservoir Habitat Management (>4 ha) Chapter 11. Watershed Concerns. Sediment. Reduction in depth Loss of fish spawning sites Increased turbidity. Organic Matter Inputs. Detritus supports food web in turbid reservoirs BOD problems. Nutrients.
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Sediment • Reduction in depth • Loss of fish spawning sites • Increased turbidity
Organic Matter Inputs • Detritus supports food web in turbid reservoirs • BOD problems
Nutrients • Eutrophication - natural aging of lake brought on by increasing productivity • Cultural eutrophication - excessive delivery, build-up of nutrients leading to excessive plant growth
Acidification • Poor buffering capacity + acid deposition = reproductive failure, gill damage, ion imbalance (homeostasis)
Contaminants • Point-source + nonpoint-source pollutants + bioaccumulation = consumption advisories
Thermal Pollution • Temperature shock • Growth, spawning problems • Gas bubble disease (nitrogen narcosis) • Entrainment - smaller, pass through • Impingement - larger, trapped on screens
Shoreline Erosion Problems • Wave action from wind, boats • Problems similar to watershed erosion
Shoreline Erosion Controls • Naturally vegetated shoreline and littoral zone • Spawning habitat + cover • Problem in reservoirs with fluctuating water levels
Shoreline Erosion Controls • Riprap • Spawning habitat
Fertilization • To increase fish production • Success limited to: • Oligotrophic lakes • Ponds (great care) • Generally causes problems in natural lakes and reservoirs (size, existing productivity)
Vegetation Control • Enhanced fishery up to ~20% coverage by macrophytes • Problems at higher levels (e.g., Lake Winona)
Vegetation Control • Extensive growth of macrophtyes after “restoration” in 1970s • Refuge for prey fishes • Overabundance - stunting
Vegetation Control • Mechanical controls • Weed harvesters • Chemical controls • Sonar, Aquashade • Biological controls • Grass carp
Stratification & Aeration • Dissolved O2 limits habitat during summer • Destratification via aeration expands habitat for warmwater fish • Can be modified to provide tiered habitat for warm- & coldwater fish
Stratification & Aeration • Aeration can also be used in winter to prevent O2 depression below ice, reduce or eliminate winterkill
Dewatering & Water Level Fluctuations • Dewatering to kill off eggs/nests of undesirable species, drive fish out of cover, consolidate/remove organic and inorganic sediments
Dewatering & Water Level Fluctuations • Flooding terrestrial vegetation every few years to produce trophic upsurge • Increase overall lake productivity, produce strong year-classes of walleye, white bass, white crappie
Habitat Diversity • Lake/reservoir shape - irregular shape produces protected habitats
Habitat Diversity • Underwater structure - natural or artificial