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Changes in Aquatic Macrophytes after Liming Thrush Lake, Minnesota
Authors:Cynthia A Hagley  David Wright  Christopher J Owen  Paul Eiler  Marilyn Banks
Institution:Minnesota Sea Grant College Program, 2305 E. 5th Street, Duluth, MN 55812, U.S.A.;Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, 520 Lafayette Road, St. Paul, MN 55155, U.S.A.;Natural Resources Research Institute, University of Minnesota Duluth, 5013 Miller Trunk Highway, Duluth, MN 55811, U.S.A.;Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, P.O. Box 156, Grand Marais, MN 55604, U.S.A.
Abstract:Thrush Lake, Minnesota, was treated with limestone in 1988 to evaluate the efficacy of protective base addition against the loss of sport fisheries in a sensitive, mildly acidic lake. Prior to treatment, the lake was stressed (pH 6.46, ANC 64 μeq/L) but not severely degraded by acidic deposition and had a macrophyte community typical of lakes in northeastern Minnesota with low acid-neutralizing capacity (ANC). This paper describes the changes observed in aquatic plant communities during the 5 years after treatment, as pH and ANC slowly returned to pretreatment levels. Sphagnum platyphyllum, intolerant of non-acid conditions, was completely eliminated from the lake. The charo-phyte, Nitella, that originally shared dominance in the deep littoral zone with S. platyphyllum, decreased in importance during the first 2 years after treatment. Two vascular plants, Potamogeton pusillus and Najas flexilis, were first found in the lake the year after treatment and were abundant for 2 years after liming, probably in response to a combination of more neutral pH and reduced cover of Nitella. As the ANC and pH slowly returned to pretreatment conditions, Nitella again increased in coverage and depth range, with a concomitant decrease in P. pusillus and N. flexilis. The moss, S. platyphyllum, had not reinvaded the lake by 1993, 2 years after its dramatic decline.
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