Combined measures in lake restoration: A powerful approach as exemplified from Lake Groote Melanen (the Netherlands)

Miquel Lürling* (Co-auteur), Maíra Mucci, Said Yasseri, Simon Hofstra, Laura M.S. Seelen, Guido Waajen

*Bijbehorende auteur voor dit werk

Onderzoeksoutput: Bijdrage aan wetenschappelijk tijdschrift/periodieke uitgaveArtikelWetenschappelijkpeer review

1 Citaat (Scopus)

Samenvatting

Controlling lake eutrophication is a challenge. A case-specific diagnostics driven approach is recommended that will guide to a suite of measures most promising in restoration of eutrophic lakes as exemplified by the case of the shallow lake Groote Melanen, The Netherlands. A lake system analysis identified external and internal nutrient load as main reasons for poor water quality and reoccurring cyanobacterial blooms in the lake. Based on this analysis, a package of restoration measures was implemented between January 2015 and May 2016. These measures included fish removal, dredging, capping of peat rich sediment with sand and an active barrier (lanthanum-modified bentonite), diversion of two inlet streams, reconstruction of banks, and planting macrophytes. Dredging and sand capping caused temporarily elevated turbidity and suspended solids concentrations, while addition of the lanthanum-modified clay caused a temporary exceedance of the Dutch La standard for freshwaters. Diversion of inflow streams caused 35 % less water inflow and larger water level fluctuations, but the lake remained water transporting with strongly improved water quality as was revealed by comparing five years pre-intervention water quality data with five years’ post-intervention data. Total phosphorus concentration in the water column was reduced by 93 % from 0.47 mg P L-1 before the intervention to 0.03 mg P L-1 after the intervention, total nitrogen by 66 % from 1.27 to 0.21 mg N L-1, total chlorophyll-a by 75 % from 68 to 16 µg L-1, cyanobacteria chlorophyll-a by 88 % from 32 to 4 µg L-1. Turbidity had declined by 58 % from 23.5 FTU to on average 9.9 FTU. No cyanobacteria blooms were recorded over the entire post-intervention monitoring period (2016–2021). Submerged macrophytes increased from complete absence before intervention to around 10 %–15 % coverage after intervention. Repeated fish removal lowered the fish stock to below 100 kg ha-1 with 12 % of bream and carp remaining. Hence, the package of cohesive measures that was based on a thorough diagnosis resulted in rapidly, strongly and enduringly improved water quality. This case provides evidence for the power of combining measures in restoring eutrophic lakes.

Originele taal-2Engels
Artikelnummer122193
TijdschriftWater Research
Volume263
Vroegere onlinedatum07 aug. 2024
DOI's
StatusGepubliceerd - 01 okt. 2024

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