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Whole-lake experimentation as a tool to assess
ecosystem health, response to stress and recovery: the Experimental
Lakes Area experience
D. F. Malley & K. H. Mills
Freshwater institute, Department of Fisheries and Oceans,
501 University Crescent, Winnipeg, MB R3T 2N5, Canada
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Abstract
The rationale and methods for and value of whole-lake
experimentation are described using the Experimental Lakes Area
(ELA), northwestern Ontario, as the example. The ELA consists of
46 lakes (<100 ha in surface area), their watersheds, arid several
streams protected for research purposes in near-pristine boreal
forest on the Precambrian Shield near Kenora, Ontario. Over more
than 20 y, whole-lake experimentation has provided unique information
on the effects on lakes of nutrient additions, acidification, Cd
addition, and biomanipulation. Experiments are planned to study
the effects of PCB addition and flooding. Recovery, mitigation,
and remediation have been explored in some experiments. As well,
the fate of radioactive metals in a lake and the effects of acidification
on a poor fen and an upland watershed are studied. Comparison between
the experimental systems and unmanipulated reference systems has
proven to be essential. These reference systems also have a role
in defining (absolute) aquatic ecosystem health for small, pristine
Precambrian Shield lakes. The ELA experimental data base is available,
as well, for calibrating indices of relative aquatic ecosystem health,
i.e., environmental degradation, using the dose-responses of lakes
to eutrophication, acidification, Cd addition, and other stressors.
Keywords: eutrophication, acidification, metal contamination,
natural variability, limnocorrals
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