EUTROPHICATION OF THE ST. LAWRENCE GREAT LAKES1

Lakes Huron, Michigan, and Superior are classified as oligotrophic lakes on the basis of their biological, chemical, and physical characteristics. Lake Ontario, although rich in nutrients, is morphometrically oligotrophic or mesotrophic because of its large area of deep water. Lake Erie, the most productive of the lakes and the shallowest, is eutrophic. Several changes commonly associated with eutrophication in small lakes have been observed in the Great Lakes. These changes apparently reflect accelerated eutrophication in the Great Lakes due to man’s activity. Chemical data compiled from a number of sources, dating as early as 1854, indicate a progressive increase in the concentrations of various major ions and total dissolved solids in all of the lakes except Lake Superior. The plankton has changed somewhat in Lake Michigan and the plankton, benthos, and fish populations of Lake Erie are greatly different today from those of the past. An extensive area of hypolimnetic water of Lake Erie has developed low dissolved oxygen concentrations in late summer within recent years.

[1]  Larue Wells Seasonal abundance and vertical movements of planktonic Crustacea in Lake Michigan , 1960 .

[2]  Arthur D. Hasler,et al.  Eutrophication of Lakes by Domestic Drainage , 1947 .

[3]  D. C. Chandler Limnological Studies of Western Lake Erie. 1, Plankton and Certain Physical-Chemical Data of the Bass Islands Region, from September, 1938, to November, 1939 , 1940 .

[4]  D. S. Rawson A LIMNOLOGICAL COMPARISON OF TWELVE LARGE LAKES IN NORTHERN SASKATCHEWAN , 1960 .

[5]  D. S. Rawson Algal Indicators of Trophic Lake Types , 1956 .

[6]  S. Eddy The plankton of Lake Michigan , 1927 .

[7]  R. B. Dole The quality of surface waters in the United States, Part I, Analyses of waters east of the one hundredth meridian , 1909 .

[8]  F. Clarke The composition of the river and lake waters of the United States , 1924 .

[9]  Harold E. Teter The Bottom Fauna of Lake Huron , 1960 .

[10]  E. H. Ahlstrom The Deep-Water Plankton of Lake Michigan, Exclusive of the Crustacea , 1936 .

[11]  C. C. Davis The Plankton of the Cleveland Harbor Area of Lake Erie in 1956‐1957 , 1962 .

[12]  L. Brundin The bottom faunistical lake type system and its application to the southern hemisphere. Moreover a theory of glacial erosion as a factor of productivity in lakes and oceans , 1958 .

[13]  W. T. Edmondson,et al.  Artificial Eutrophication of Lake Washington1 , 1956 .

[14]  Stanford H. Smith Status of the Deepwater Cisco Population of Lake Michigan , 1964 .

[15]  K. Damann Plankton Studies of Lake Michigan: II. Thirty-Three Years of Continuous Plankton and Coliform Bacteria Data Collected from Lake Michigan at Chicago, Illinois , 1960 .

[16]  A. S. Bradshaw The crustacean zooplancton picture: Lake Erie 1939-49-59; Cayuga 1910-51-61 , 1964 .

[17]  D. S. Rawson The Total Mineral Content of Lake Waters , 1951 .

[18]  H. H. Chase,et al.  Diatomaceae of Lake Michigan as collected during the last sixteen years from the water supply of the City of Chicago , 1886 .

[19]  J. F. Carr Dissolved oxygen in Lake Erie, past and present , 1962 .

[20]  A. Beeton Environmental Changes in Lake Erie , 1961 .