Lake
Restoration – Dealing with the Problem
To
achieve lake restoration, we must restore the natural processes
that allow a lake to assimilate the nutrient load that it
receives. While nutrient inputs should be reduced or eliminated
wherever possible, this process has historically failed to
achieve lake restoration. The Clean-Flo Lake Restoration Process
achieves lake restoration by using and accelerating natural
processes already in lakes to achieve natural lake restoration
the same as nature has restored lakes for thousands of years.
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The Lake Restoration Problem
Development within watersheds has increased greatly in recent
years and many lakes have been subjected to an
ever-increasing load of nutrients and sediments,
resulting in decreased lake water quality, thereby
interfering with lake restoration efforts. Increased
nutrient loadings are most commonly due to excessive use
of fertilizers, malfunctioning septic systems, poor
erosion control and improper waste disposal within the
watershed. As development continues to increase, the
amount of total hard–surfaced area also increases and
the volume and velocity of the water moving through the
watershed into surface waters is increased. This run-off
erodes soils and transports organic materials and
nutrients from surface soils. Inorganic materials, in
the form of sand, silt, and clay are also transported to
receiving waters, resulting in decreased lake water
quality
Lake Restoration by
Controlling Input
In an ideal world, applying
effective lake restoration controls within the watershed
to control the quality and limit the quantity of run-off
should be the best solution. However, even in the best
situation, watershed controls are not 100% effective in
achieving lake restoration. These lake restoration
control measures can
reduce nutrient loadings but they are only as effective
as the enforcement effort behind their
implementation. The elevated nutrient loadings that find
their way into streams, lakes and ponds cause: algae
blooms, proliferation of rooted aquatic plants, low
dissolved oxygen levels, increased water temperature,
odors, increased bacteria
levels, and stunted fish populations or fish kills and
do not accomplish complete lake restoration. Many
studies have shown that watershed management only
reduces pollutants in lakes by about 5 – 35 percent.
This usually is not enough to make a noticeable
difference in lake restoration for aquatic lake weed and
lake algae growth, does little or nothing to
improve fish health, nothing to reduce
mucky lake bottoms or reduce disease bacteria or
odors.
Natural Lake Restoration
Processes
Healthy lakes have a natural lake restoration capacity to cleanse
themselves. Each lake is an individual ecosystem with a
food chain of organisms that assimilate the incoming
nutrients. The food chain moves nutrients up from the
simplest single-celled bacteria, to people catching
fish. This natural lake restoration system works very
well
to improve lake water quality, keeping the ecosystem in
balance until excessive nutrient inflow overwhelms the
ability of the ecosystem to assimilate the nutrients.
Once this occurs, the excessive nutrient
levels adversely affect the aesthetic qualities of the
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Bennett Lake before. |
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Bennett Lake
after.
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lake by
stimulating the growth of nuisance algae and plant life. Algae
blooms can quickly turn a lake “pea soup” green or cause the
formation of “smelly” floating algae mats.
Lake weeds can interfere with swimming, boating and
fishing.
Attempted Lake Restoration with
Chemical Treatment
Traditionally, aquatic weed or algae problems have been
addressed by using chemical treatments. Chemicals are applied at
the water surface or directly to floating mats. The chemicals
kill the weeds
and algae and the dying vegetation sinks to the bottom of the
water-body where it rots. As the vegetation rots, the plant
nutrients in it that have been absorbed from the water are
released back to the water column and become nutrients for the
next weed growth or algae bloom. But something far worse occurs;
as the vegetation decays, it uses up the oxygen at the bottom.
Many studies have shown that an average of about three times as
much nutrients are released from bottom sediment of lakes
without oxygen, than what typically comes in from the watershed
each year. The next weed or algal growth will occur when
conditions of light and temperature are favorable, and the
concentration of the water treatment chemical in the water
column is reduced below toxic levels. The effectiveness of the
water treatment chemical is quickly reduced as it settles to the
bottom and is diluted by lake inflow and mixing with waters from
untreated portions of the lake. The dead mass of vegetation
accumulates on the bottom of the lake adding to the mass of
organic sediments already there. Herbicides and algaecides do
more harm to water quality than they do good. They sometimes
cause fish kills and add toxic substances to the water and
sediments, and have completely failed
to achieve true lake restoration.
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The Beginning of the lake Restoration Problem
If
there is oxygen present, the accumulated organic
sediments begin to decompose aerobically. This organic
material serves as food for bacteria and organisms that
live in the substrate (bacteria, insect larvae, worms,
etc.). These organisms require and consume dissolved
oxygen as they digest the organic sediments. As
sediments and biological activity increase, dissolved
oxygen levels are depleted and become limiting. Low or
no dissolved oxygen conditions can occur quickly,
eliminating aerobic organisms and slowing the breakdown
of the organic sediments. Then the growth of anaerobic
bacteria, the bacteria that thrives in an environment of
low or no dissolved oxygen, increases. Anaerobic
digestion of the organic sediments begins, releasing
toxic gases into the water that kill beneficial aerobic
bacteria and insects.
The Real Lake Restoration
Problem
Anaerobic digestion of lake sediments is a much slower
process than with aerobic digestion. Where aerobic
digestion can result in the control or reduction of
organic sediment levels, anaerobic digestion almost
always allows organic sediments levels to increase.
During anaerobic digestion, bacterial enzymes and lack
of oxygen make the nutrients in the bottom sediments
soluble. Then the nutrients return to the water column
and are available to support new weed and algae growth.
Anaerobic |
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conditions at
the lake bottom have a damaging effect on the food chain that
supports fish populations as well as reducing or eliminating
fish habitat, ultimately resulting in a reduction of the fish
quality, size and quantity.
Treating the Symptoms
Chemical
treatment of lakes for algae control and aquatic plants can be a
valuable tool in the aesthetic management of a lake, but it does
not eliminate the condition that causes the problem. Water
treatment chemicals cannot be applied to prevent an algae bloom.
They can only be applied to eliminate the bloom. The bloom
captures dissolved nutrients from the water column and creates
algae. The chemical treatment kills the lake algae, and the dead
and dying organisms settle to the bottom where they decompose
releasing soluble nutrients back to the water column. Once the
biomass is formed, nutrients are effectively locked into the
lake’s ecosystem to be recycled forever. Some chemical
treatments, copper in particular, can accumulate in lake
sediments when used year after year. Accumulated copper can
reach levels that are toxic to aquatic organisms or result in
the growth of algae that is resistant to the effects of copper.
Herbicides for aquatic weed control create similar problems.
The Natural Lake Restoration Process
The natural
assimilation of nutrients in the lake ecosystem begins to
breakdown when these natural processes are limited or eliminated
by low oxygen levels. Aerobic organisms are much more efficient
at digesting organic material than anaerobic organisms. Aerobic
organisms feed on organic material contained in the sediments
and assimilate these nutrients into increased body mass and
reproduction. Aerobically assimilated nutrients become part of
the food chain, rather than being
recycled within the water column, as they are when anaerobic
conditions exist. By maintaining aerobic conditions at the
bottom of a lake, fish, the top consumer will also improve in
quantity and quality as the fish aid in the lake restoration
process. Maintaining the aerobic environment will also reduce or
prevent the accumulation of organic sediments. Aerobic
conditions at the lake bottom benefit all aspects of the aquatic
environment, resulting in true lake restoration.
The CLEAN-FLO Approach
The
CLEAN-FLO Continuous Laminar Flow Inversion and Oxygenation
System restores and maintains aerobic conditions in lakes.
The CLEAN-FLO system employs natural non-turbulent
inversion to aerate the lake from
bottom to top. The CLEAN-FLO system allows natural lake
restoration processes to naturally occur within a lake using
oxygen (air) and natural lake restoration
bacterial and enzyme products. Click here to read about
our
Lake Aeration Systems.
Lake Specific System
Each CLEAN-FLO
system is engineered specifically for the lake in which it is to
be installed. The design process begins with an assessment of
water quality data and existing conditions. Watershed
characteristics, and physical dimensions and depths are also
evaluated. A system is then designed to address the specific
conditions that exist in the lake.
Complete lake restoration questionnaire to receive a FREE
proposal for your lake.
Contact Us
Please feel free to contact us. We would be glad to discuss
your lake, its condition, and how we could be of assistance. Our
approach to lake restoration
management is different than many service providers. We believe
in solving the problem rather than treating the symptoms.
Let us solve your problem with natural
lake restoration.
Restoration of Ponds
Restoration of Reservoirs
Restoration of Rivers
Restoration for Aquaculture
Restoration of Wastewater Ponds
Improve lake
fishing and improve water chemistry using natural lake
restoration processes.
When is the best time to start?
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Copyright
©2005
CLEAN-FLO 827 Lincoln Avenue, Suite 1, West Chester, PA 19380
Ph: 1-800-328-6656 Fax: (610) 431-1959
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