Spencer Apollonio, Jasmine E. Saros
Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research 46 (2), 293-307, (1 February 2014) https://doi.org/10.1657/1938-4246-46.2.293
We report on a limnological study of ice-covered Upper Dumbell Lake (Ellesmere Island, Canada) conducted during the summer of 1959. The lake was vertically profiled for physical (temperature, light), chemical (alkalinity, pH, oxygen, nutrients), and biological (chlorophyll a, gross and net primary productivity) variables on 21 dates spanning from early July to early September. Zooplankton density and age structure were also determined on four dates. Factors such as temperature, alkalinity, pH, and oxygen varied little with depth or over time, whereas nutrients (nitrate, dissolved silica, soluble reactive phosphorus), light, chlorophyll a, and gross and net photosynthesis varied substantially. Comparing July to August, nitrate and light intensity decreased while dissolved silica, chlorophyll a, and gross and net primary production increased, with two distinct peaks in algal biomass occurring over the month of August. Chlorophyll a in this lake was negatively correlated with nitrate concentrations, suggesting uptake of nitrogen as algal biomass increased. The copepod Limnocalanus macrurus was the dominant zooplankton taxon present; the age structure of the population advanced over the summer. This study reveals the dynamic nature of vertical habitat gradients even under the ice of Arctic lakes and provides important baseline data for conditions in an Arctic lake during the mid-20th century.