University of Alaska, Institute of Water Resources
Abstract
Project Officer
Eldor W. Schallock
Assessment and Criteria Development Division
Corvallis Environmental Research Laboratory
Corvallis, Oregon 97330;Corvallis Environmental Research Laboratory
Office of Research and Development
U. S. Environmental Protection Agency
Corvallis, Oregon 97330; R800276The primary objective of this project was to assess the state of the
water quality of Harding Lake, and to attempt to predict the effects of
future development within its watershed. Since the major effect of degradation
of water quality due to human activity is the promotion of nuisance
growths of plants, the major emphasis was placed on measurements of plant
growth and concentrations of the major nutrients they require. Planktonic
algal growth was found to be low, below 95.6 gm/m2/year, and the growth of
submerged rooted plants was found to be relatively less important at approximately
1.35 gm/m2/year. Measurements of the growth of attached algae were
not conducted, therefore the relative importance of their growth is currently
unknown.
A model for predicting the effect of future real estate development in
the watershed was modified and applied to this lake. This model adequately
describes current water quality conditions, and is assumed to have some
predictive ability, but several cautions concerning application of this
model to Harding Lake are discussed.
A secondary objective was to study the thermal regime of a deep subarctic
lake. Intensive water temperature measurements were made throughout
one year and less intensive measurements were conducted during two additional
years. The possibility that this lake may occasionally stratify thermally
under the ice and not mix completely in the spring was discovered. The
implications of this possibility are discussed for management of subarctic
lakes. Hydrologic and energy budgets of this lake are attempted; the annual
heat budget is estimated at 1.96 x 104 ± 1.7 x 103 cal/cm2.
The results of a study of domestic water supply and waste disposal
alternatives in the watershed, and the potential for enteric bacterial contamination
of the lake water are presented. Limited work on the zooplankton,
fishes, and benthic macroinvertebrates of this lake is also presented