Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8849125 Journal of Great Lakes Research 2018 15 Pages PDF
Abstract
Lake Baikal, an ancient lake in Siberia, contains more endemic species than any other lake in the world with most of them residing in the benthic littoral zone. Explosive growth of benthic Spirogyra, a filamentous green alga, began approximately in 2011 in localized coastal areas, with the most severe examples occurring near coastal towns that lack a wastewater treatment facility or have a malfunctioning system. At other sites (small settlements, harbors), however, the cause of its excess growth is less obvious. Multiple hypotheses have been offered including lake level fluctuations, climate warming, a relaxation of grazing pressure, and coastal eutrophication. We assessed these hypotheses using data on historical lake levels, water temperature, the spatial-temporal distribution of Spirogyra along inhabited and non-inhabited shorelines, and measurements of fecal coliform bacteria and nutrients in ground water, interstitial water, and lake water. These data suggest that groundwater contamination is the primary cause of coastal eutrophication. Most houses and buildings in small settlements around Lake Baikal lack septic tanks but use unlined cesspools to collect human waste. This untreated human waste enters groundwater via passive filtration through permeable soils and flows to the coastal zone where it drives excess growth of Spirogyra. Remediation - including installation of septic systems, modernization of existing sewage treatment plants in coastal towns, and the adoption of non-phosphate containing detergents - as well as a reconsideration of the federal monitoring system regarding the coastal zone is urgently needed to protect this extraordinary lake.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth and Planetary Sciences (General)
Authors
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