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Dissolved oxygen and thermal regimes of a Ugandan crater lake
Authors:Chapman  Lauren J.  Chapman  Colin A.  Crisman  Thomas L.  Nordlie  Frank G.
Affiliation:(1) Department of Zoology, University of Florida, Gainsville, FL, 326111, U.S.A;(2) Wildlife Conservation Society, 2300 Southern Boulevard, Bronx, NY, 10460, U.S.A.;(3) Center for Wetlands, Department of Environmental Engineering Sciences, University of Florida, Gainsville, FL, 326111, U.S.A
Abstract:This paper quantifies the temporal pattern of thermal stratification and deoxygenation in Lake Nkuruba, a small (3 ha), deep (maximum depth = 38 m) crater lake in western Uganda. Dissolved oxygen penetrated to an average depth of 9 m and a maximum depth of 15 m below which the lake was permanently anoxic over the 2 years of study. Although surface oxygen levels were correlated with both surface water temperature and rainfall, seasonal cycles of dissolved oxygen were not well-defined and may have been obscured by the high frequency of short-term fluctuations and by inter-annual variations caused by shifts in rainfall. Surface water temperature averaged 23.3±0.7 °C (S.D.) and varied directly with air temperature. Both diurnal changes and top-bottom temperature differentials were small averaging 1.7±0.7 °C and 1.6±0.8 °C, respectively. Thermal stability ranged from 101.3 to 499.9 g-cm cm-2 and was positively related to surface water temperature suggesting that this small protected lake responds rapidly to short-term meteorological changes. Because contribution to the annual heat exchange cycle was confined to upper waters, the lake's annual heat budget was low, 1,073.8 cal cm-2 yr-1. However, net primary productivity was relatively high averaging 1.3 g C m-2d-1. The region where Lake Nkuruba is situated experienced a very strong earthquake (6.2 on the Richter scale) on 4 February, 1994. Subsequently, water levels dropped markedly in the lake, falling 3.14 m over a 5-month period. This revised version was published online in September 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.
Keywords:hypoxia  anoxic hypolimnion  volcanic crater lake  stratification  productivity  heat budget  stability
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