ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Temperature and dissolved oxygen stratification in the lake Rudrasagar: Preliminary investigations

Mihir Pal Pal    
Nihar R. Samal    
Pankaj k. Roy Roy    
Malabika B. Roy    

Resumen

Temperature drives the major physico-chemical and biological actions in inland water bodies. The higher the water temperature, the greater the biogeochemical activity influenced by the environmental intrinsic and extrinsic parameters. Temperature also controls the dynamics of sustainability of various aquatic organisms that live in lakes and reservoirs, though higher life forms, such as fish, insects, zooplankton, phytoplankton, and other aquatic species all have a recommended temperature variety. The increase in water temperature due to the increase in atmospheric air temperature results in lake water column stratification and the dissolved oxygen level variation in aquatic systems are greatly affected. The vertical distributions of dissolved oxygen in the water column are highly dependent due to change in vertical temperature gradient. In the present paper, an effort has been made to investigate the impact of temperature stratification on dissolved oxygen variability in the Rudrasagar, a natural lake in western Tripura. The changes in dissolved oxygen distribution in this natural lake will give us an idea of regional lake health condition and will also establish the need of further large scale research concerning the development of a biophysical-coupled model.   Keywords: Thermal stratification, Dissolved Oxygen, Thermocline, Rudrasagar Lake, Hypolimnion

 Artículos similares

       
 
Shu Liao, Xiangyin Ni, Wanqin Yang, Han Li, Bin Wang, Changkun Fu, Zhenfeng Xu, Bo Tan and Fuzhong Wu    
Longstanding observations suggest that dissolved materials are lost from fresh litter through leaching, but the role of soil fauna in controlling this process has been poorly documented. In this study, a litterbag experiment employing litterbags with dif... ver más
Revista: Forests

 
Horacio E. Bown, Michael S. Watt     Pág. 95 - 109
Stem CO2 efflux is a highly variable component of the carbon budget of forest ecosystems. It reflects the balance between the CO2 respired by the living stem tissues, less the CO2 dissolved in the xylem sap moving upward in the transpiration stream, plus... ver más

 
Mihir Pal Pal,Nihar R. Samal,Pankaj k. Roy Roy,Malabika B. Roy    
Temperature drives the major physico-chemical and biological actions in inland water bodies. The higher the water temperature, the greater the biogeochemical activity influenced by the environmental intrinsic and extrinsic parameters. Temperature also co... ver más

 
Reinaldo Rivera, Patricio de Los Ríos, Ángel Contreras     Pág. 141 - 149
The presence of alloctone bacteria is considered as one of the more important biological pollutants of water bodies, existing one close relation between the fecal contamination indicators and the existence of urban and industrial zones. In the present... ver más

 
Uselman, Shauna M.; Qualls, Robert G.; Thomas, Richard B.     Pág. 191 - 202
Revista: PLANT AND SOIL