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Lakes and Ponds Chapter 12
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Conditions in Lakes and Ponds Cons: oxygen is limited the deeper you go, the darker it gets Pros: lack of water not a problem temperatures change slowly and not as much as in air
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Conditions in Lakes and Ponds A productive lake will have plants growing on the bottom, a diverse assemblage of small invertebrates, and a good variety of fish species
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Conditions in Lakes and Ponds Wild, productive lakes have different zones, based on depth and distance from shore 1.Shoreline – greatest diversity (wetland) 2.Light, open-water zone – submerged plants 3.Dark zone – bacteria and fungi feed on dead organic matter; a few fish live here
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Conditions in Lakes and Ponds Benthos – the lake bottom, and the organisms that live there Microorganisms, worms, mollusks, crustaceans, insect larvae A vital part of a healthy lake
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Diversity of Florida Lakes Lake, Orange, Polk, and Osceola county contain more than a third of Florida’s lakes
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Diversity of Florida Lakes Florida’s lakes vary in their characteristics: alkaline or acid rich or poor in nutrients clear or colored (usually a “tea color”) bottom may be sand, silt, clay or organic streams may run in or out, or neither may always hold water, or just seasonally
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Diversity of Florida Lakes Four lake types we will discuss: 1.Clay-hill lakes 2.Sandhill lakes 3.Swamp lake or Basin swamp 4.Flatlands lakes
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Diversity of Florida Lakes Clay-Hill Lakes A depression lake on a bed of clay; the water cannot seep down through the clay Water comes mostly from rain and runoff, and is lost by evaporation
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Diversity of Florida Lakes Sandhill Lakes A depression in sand with an organic layer on the bottom that keeps water from draining down Water may come from rain or from groundwater seepage (sideways)
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Diversity of Florida Lakes Sandhill Lakes Shallow, sunny, with acidic water and a sandy bottom Important for insects, amphibians, and wading birds
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Diversity of Florida Lakes Swamp lakes / Basin swamps Very shady shoreline, acidic water, not very productive “Blackwater lakes”
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Diversity of Florida Lakes Flatlands lakes Open water within flatwood or prairie wetlands Many emergent plants Lake Okeechobee
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Diversity of Florida Lakes Flatlands lakes Cypress domes and donuts in small, shallow depressions tallest trees in center
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Seasonal Changes in Florida Lakes The area and depth of a lake changes over time from season to season over decades or centuries depends mainly on rainfall
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Seasonal Changes in Florida Lakes As a lake gets deeper or more shallow, it strongly affects life on the shoreline. As a lake gets deeper, it expands, and terrestrial plants on the shore will die while emergent plants move in.
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Seasonal Changes in Florida Lakes If a lake dries up, the muck that has accumulated on the bottom will oxidize and disappear fires may burn new seeds can sprout underwater life will go dormant
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Seasonal Changes in Florida Lakes Wet/dry cycling is good for a lake – keeps it from completely filling in with muck, so water stays clearer and oxygen-rich Because there’s not much (or any) flow through most FL lakes, what runs into a lake will stay there indefinitely - pollutants can be a problem
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Seasonal Changes in Florida Lakes Eutrophication – when excess nutrients (N and P) run off into a lake 1.Algae take advantage and grow rapidly (algal bloom) 2.As algae die, decomposing bacteria feed on them and use up oxygen 3.Water becomes oxygen-poor and murky: fish and submerged plants die
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Plants and Animals in Florida Lakes A lake isn’t just about the organisms that can be seen – there is a diversity of microscopic organisms These are the basis of a lake’s food web
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Plants and Animals in Florida Lakes Lakes are important to visiting animals as well water birds visit to catch prey birds and mammals stop by to get a drink often, FL lakes are stopping places for migratory birds: ducks, pelicans, cranes
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Bald eagle Haliaeetus leucocephalus White pelicans Alligator Alligator mississippiensis
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Human Use of Florida Lakes Lakes have high recreational value, and are considered a desirable “view” Large lakes moderate the local climate Provide a reservoir of water for domestic or agricultural use
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