Studies of the hydrobiology of a tropical lake in north-western Queensland. II. Seasonal changes in thermal and dissolved oxygen characteristics
Australian Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research
31(5) 589 - 596
Published: 1980
Abstract
The stratification characteristics of Lake Moondarra (24º34'S.,139º35'E.), a man-made lake in north- western Queensland, have been studied. Evidence is presented that the lake approximates the warm polymictic type in which no persistent thermal stratification ever develops. During the cooler months, thermal stratification breaks down during the night; in the warmer months, the intense rainstorms prevent the establishment of a persistently stratified water column. The shallowness of the lake relative to its surface areaand the prevailing environmental conditions ensure that extensive periods of oxygen depletion do not develop in the water column. It is concluded that a strong and prolonged period of thermal stratification, with subsequent serious effects of the availability of dissolved oxygen in the deeper layers, would only arise if, in a particular year. there were no significant rainstorms.
https://doi.org/10.1071/MF9800589
© CSIRO 1980