Abstract

AbstractTri‐Lakes (Upper and Lower Camelot, Sherwood, Arrowhead) in Adams County, WI, USA are man‐made impoundments draining substantial agricultural lands and surrounded by considerable shoreline residential development. The planktonic algal community, as sampled from June to November 2000, was sparse‐to‐moderately dense, fairly diverse (69 genera from six divisions basin‐wide), and unremarkable in taxonomic composition. All sites sampled displayed the general algal successional trends expected from northern‐temperate, mildly eutrophic waters. These included sparse but taxonomically diverse communities in the spring; a late spring pulse of diatoms; a late summer pulse of green algae; and a steadily increasing component of Cyanobacteria leading to their community dominance by the end of the growing season. Upper Lake Camelot (55 genera) best represented this pattern. Lower Lake Camelot (53 genera) had a large green algal pulse but only a small diatom pulse. Lake Sherwood was the most taxonomically diverse body (63 genera) and had the most extreme pulses of diatoms and greens. Lake Arrowhead had the lowest taxonomic diversity (39 genera), was the most dominated by Cyanobacteria, and had only minor pulses of diatoms and greens. The algal communities indicate a mesotrophic to slightly eutrophic lake status. Continued agricultural and residential inputs of fertilizers and pesticides will likely exacerbate the cyanobacterial dominance leading to further reductions in aquatic health and aesthetic values. Previous chemical treatment and macrophyte removal have achieved limited success, and might have altered algal community dynamics. Remediation approaches that might improve water quality include: reducing upstream inputs via sediment traps or lagoons; reducing in‐lake nutrients via sediment removal; reducing residential inputs via improved septic/sanitation systems; and shoreline vegetation filter strips.

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