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Fish farming in lakes and acceptable total phosphorus
loads:Calibrations, simulations and predictions using the
LEEDS model in Lake Southern Bullaren, Sweden
L. Hâkanson*, L. Carlsson
Department of Earth Sciences, Uppsala University
752 3d Uppsala, Sweden
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Abstract
This work presents
a dynamic model, Lake Eutrophication, Effect-Dose-Sensitivity (LEEDS),
designed to predict how large a fish farm a lake could sustain without
incurring eutrophication problems. Since the model included various
time-dependent phosphorus cycling processes, the second goal was
to estimate the relative importance of those processes. We studied
the dimictic and mesotrophic Lake Southern Bullaren, Sweden for
several reasons. The lake had a fish farm which produced between
70 and 500 tons of rainbow trout per year from 1980 to 1992 (the
permit was for a maximum of 70 tons y1) Rather severe
blooms of Cyanophyceae occurred twice during the last six
years of production.
Based on comprehensive water chemistry and biology data
sets, the LEEDS model was calibrated at 14 specific points in order
to yield reliable predictions for this lake. The dominating phosphorus
loads were the fluxes from tributaries and the fish farm (assuming
a production of 500 tons y-1), which accounted for about
70% and 25% of the total phosphorus load, respectively. The simulations
suggested that about 50% of the annual deposition of phosphorus
was resuspended, of which about 60% reached the productive surface
waters. Further, the lake should have been able to sustain a fish
farm producing about 500 tons of rainbow trout per year without
sustaining marked ecosystem effects such as increased algal volume.
LEEDS includes all major fluxes for evaluations of fish
farm emissions in temperate lakes. The relative importance of the
various processes vary from lake to lake. Among internal fluxes,
the largest uncertainty lies in the rate of total phosphorus sedimentation.
All other internal fluxes (resuspension, diffusion, etc.) depend
on this rate. By identifying the major fluxes in a given lake, one
could also identify the major uncertainties of model predictions
of target variables, e.g., lake total phosphorus concentration and
maximum algal volume. A future improvement of this model would be
the development of a general, validated sub-model for the rate of
total phosphorus sedimentation as well as the development of a generic
sub-model for the distribution coefficient (Kd),
which regulates the amount of phosphorus in dissolved and suspended
phases and hence the rate of phosphorus sedimentation. © 1998
Elsevier Science Ltd and AEHMS. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Phosphorus;
Primary production; Eutrophication; Phytoplankton volume
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