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- Title
Physical and Chemical Limnology of 34 Lentic Waterbodies along a Tropical-to-Alpine Altitudinal Gradient in Nepal.
- Authors
Bill Freedman
- Abstract
Physical and chemical factors were studied in 34 lentic waterbodies distributed along a steep altitudinal gradient ranging from tropical (77 m) to high alpine (up to 4,980 m) environments in Nepal. Bicarbonate and calcium were dominant among anions and cations, respectively, reflecting a strong influence of carbonate weathering and watershed area, rather than altitudinal climate. The relative patterns of dominant ions were similar among lakes in all altitudinal regions, although total concentrations increased with decreasing altitude. Total suspended solids were relatively high in the study lakes, as is also typical of rivers in the Ganges watershed. Suspended solids had a greater influence on water transparency than did algal biomass in the study lakes. In general, high-altitude waterbodies were oligotrophic, while those at low altitude were eutrophic. The productivity of high-altitude study lakes appeared to be limited by both available phosphorus and nitrogen, while lowland ones were nitrogen-limited. (© 2005 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim)
- Publication
International Review of Hydrobiology, 2005, Vol 90, Issue 3, p254
- ISSN
1434-2944
- Publication type
Article