On the Variation in Bottom Fauna and Fish Yield in Relation to Trophic Level and Lake Dimensions
- 1 January 1957
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Journal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada
- Vol. 14 (1) , 1-32
- https://doi.org/10.1139/f57-001
Abstract
The relation of area to depth was studied for 500 lakes. Up to 0.3 km.2 the mean depth is constant at 3 to 4 m. This is probably an artifact due to omission of shallow lakes from study. From 0.3 to 300 km.2 the relation of depth to area is linear on a log—log plot. In the largest lakes the depths increase less proportionally.Of the three ways to study fish productivity in lakes, one, the estimate of standing crops, is usually attempted at mean depths around 1 m. Another, angling returns, centers on lakes of 3.5 m., while commercial reports come from lakes of 6.5 m. average depth, and extend to the deepest lakes.Fish records can be conveniently divided into three trophic levels, short food chain, e.g. carp, intermediate, e.g. bluegills and long, e.g. trout, bass. Records are interconvertible by use of factors. By factoring, a productivity index is calculated for some 150 lakes.The productivity index is found to be inversely proportional to mean depth on a log—log plot. Thus by correction of the PI it is possible to derive a theoretical value, called the quality index, for a standard lake 5 m. deep.The QI is intended to screen the effect of depth out of the PI and so disclose the inherent capacity of the lake. The QI values vary around unity. Lakes of mean depth under 2.5 m. are factored as of that depth, it being assumed that primary productivity due to photosynthesis goes on all the way to the bottom.A study of bottom fauna in 250 lakes in several regions gave no indication of a relation between depth and productivity.This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mean Depth and the Fish Production of Large LakesEcology, 1952
- Movements of Marked Walleyes, Stizostedion Vitreum Vitreum (Mitchill), in the Fishery of the Red Lakes, MinnesotaTransactions of the American Fisheries Society, 1952
- Fishery Management of Claytor Lake, an Impoundment on the New River in VirginiaTransactions of the American Fisheries Society, 1951
- The Physical Limnology of Great Slave LakeJournal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 1950
- Annual Limnological Cycles in Some Colorado Reservoir LakesEcological Monographs, 1949
- The Exchange of Dissolved Substances Between Mud and Water in LakesJournal of Ecology, 1941
- Limnological studies in Connecticut; Part V, A contribution to regional limnologyAmerican Journal of Science, 1940
- On the Relation between the Oxygen Deficit and the productivity and Typology of LakesInternational Review of Hydrobiology, 1938
- Phytoplankton in the English Lakes: I. The Proportions in the Waters of Some Dissolved Substances of Biological ImportanceJournal of Ecology, 1930