1 / 14

Oneida Lake By: Don Maryanski

Oneida Lake By: Don Maryanski. How was Oneida Formed?. Formed from Lake Iroquois Glaciers receded and damned St. Lawrence As temp. increased St. Lawrence was able to flow out into ocean and Oneida formed in glacial depression. Physical properties.

Télécharger la présentation

Oneida Lake By: Don Maryanski

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Oneida LakeBy: Don Maryanski

  2. How was Oneida Formed? • Formed from Lake Iroquois • Glaciers receded and damned St. Lawrence • As temp. increased St. Lawrence was able to flow out into ocean and Oneida formed in glacial depression

  3. Physical properties • It is the largest lake by surface area (207 km2) completely bordered by N.Y. • Mean depth is 6.8m • Max depth 16.8m • 20.9 miles long and 5.8 miles wide

  4. More on Oneida • Dimictic and eutrophic • Isothermal in summer • Increasing population causing increased sediment and nutrient imput • Population near lake in 1900 was 413,000, today it is over 886,000 • Exotic species causing changes in food web (zebra mussel) • 8 exotic species in 1900, 18 today

  5. Temperature profile

  6. Phytoplankton • Epilimnion • Aulacosira • Microcystis • Small flagellates • Metalimnion • Aulacosira • Microcystis • Mallanomous • Small flagellates • Hypolimnion • Aulacosira • Microcystis • acinastrum

  7. Macrophytes • Ceratophyllum • No roots, dependant on water nutrients • Elodea • Grows in wide range of condition • Good habitat for aquatic animals • Valisneria • “eelgrass” or “tapegrass” • Sometimes forms underwater meadows

  8. Zooplankton • Cyclopoid and Calanoid Copepods • Cladocerans (Bosmina, Daphnia and Diaphanosoma) • Keratella • Polyarthra

  9. Benthic invertebrates • Gastropods (snails) • Zebra mussel • Introduced • Filter algae from water and wake it more clear • Chironomidae • Non-biting midges

  10. Exotic Species • Zebra mussel • Discovered in 1991 • Caused loss of 3 native clam species

  11. Water Chestnut • Can dramatically cover surface of water preventing little light from entering • Can also clog waterways

  12. Purple loosestrife • Displaces native wetland plants • Less suitable for wildlife than native plants

  13. Round Goby • Consume zebra mussels but also eat fish eggs

  14. Fishhook waterflea • Prey on zooplankton • Not edible by small fish

More Related