Crystal Lake (Vilas County, Wisconsin)

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Coordinates46°00′07″N 89°36′47″W / 46.002°N 89.613°W / 46.002; -89.613
Average depth34 feet (10 m)
Crystal Lake
Location of Crystal Lake in Wisconsin, USA.
Location of Crystal Lake in Wisconsin, USA.
Crystal Lake
Location of Crystal Lake in Wisconsin, USA.
Location of Crystal Lake in Wisconsin, USA.
Crystal Lake
LocationVilas County, Wisconsin
Coordinates46°00′07″N 89°36′47″W / 46.002°N 89.613°W / 46.002; -89.613
Typeseepage lake
Average depth34 feet (10 m)
Max. depth67 feet (20 m)

Crystal Lake is one of at least 22 lakes of that name in the state of Wisconsin.[1] It has a surface area of about 93 acres,[2] and is located just south of Big Muskellunge Lake, in Vilas County in the Northern Highland region of Wisconsin. The nearest community is Sayner, about 5 miles to the east. Visitors have access to the lake from a public boat landing, public beaches and the Northern Highland-American Legion State Forest. Fish include panfish, largemouth bass, and trout.

Crystal Lake is a seepage lake, having neither tributary nor effluent.[3] The lake has a maximum depth of 67 feet and a mean depth of 34 feet.[4] The lake has very clear water, comparable to that of Lake Tahoe in California, or Crater Lake in Oregon.[5]

Crystal Lake is a kettle hole lake, meaning it was formed from glacial movement and melting and it's located in Vilas County, Wisconsin.[6] Many kettle lakes are sealed by glacial till and have perched water tables, but Crystal Lake does not.[7] It is not surprising that Crystal lake is a seepage lake considering most lakes in Wisconsin are also seepage lakes.[8] Since this lake is a seepage lake, it doesn't receive water from an inlet or an outlet, 90% of its water is from precipitation, less than 5% of the water is from the groundwater supply, and it doesn't receive a lot of runoff water because of the pine trees surrounding the lake, the permeable soil surrounding the lake, and the lack of large differences in elevation.[9][10][7][8] Most of the water in the lake coming from precipitation can contribute to less biodiversity in terms of fish[9][8][7] and means that most nutrients and minerals come from surface runoff, groundwater, and the atmosphere.[10] Biodiversity is also less common in oligotrophic lakes like Crystal lake.[9][6] Crystal lake is also dimictic,[11] meaning that the water in the lake mixes twice a year and is stratified in between mixing periods.

Ecology

In 1994, Leptodiaptomus minutus, a copepod species, commonly carried the peritrich ciliate Epistylis lacustris; 70% of copepods in 1994 carried at least one ciliate.[9] This is a common phenomenon in many lakes and infested copepods often have lesions, making them easier prey which causes copepod populations to vary depending on ciliate infestation rates.[9] The experiment by Xie, Sanderson, Frost, and Magnuson found that in Crystal lake, infestation rates positively correlated with copepod population density.[9] This is contrary to another experiment performed on Shinhamako Lake which found a negative correlation between the two variables. The highest infestation rate in the study on Crystal Lake was 23.4% which is almost 7% less than the highest infestation rate in Shinhamako Lake at the time.[9]

Airborne pine pollen is very common in the area around Crystal Lake and the fluctuation of pine pollen at Crystal Lake in 1981 was found to be 6.5gm−2.[10] The sediment in Crystal Lake has an immense number of diatoms and pollen which may be caused in part by atmospheric pollen around the lake.[10] Evidence that pine pollen is extremely common in Crystal Lake can be found in the n-alkane deposits in the summer of 1981 because 66% of the n-alkane came from the pollen.[10] Pine pollen is also a main source of organic carbon, phosphorus, 45% of the phosphorus is from pollen, and K+, 20% of the positive potassium ion was from the pollen.[10] Although pine pollen contributes these elements, concentrations of phosphorus and silicone are low in Crystal Lake which is likely due to the low amounts of surface runoff the lake receives.[10]

In a study comparing three temperate lakes with three different trophic levels, Crystal Lake was the only lake with stable levels of automated ribosomal intergenic spacer analysis, ARISA, fragments in the years 2000 and 2001.[11] ARISA is a technique that allows researchers to gain knowledge about the community of bacteria present in the lake at the time.[11] The bacterial community did vary in the summer at the same time the lake was stratified.[11]

An experiment performed on Crystal Lake and four other lakes in Vilas County examined how El Niño and La Niña and climate oscillation affect chlorophyll α concentrations on the surface of the water and algae dynamics between the five lakes.[12] The chlorophyll α concentrations of the lakes changed in the same ways and amounts to different climate patterns and the results supported that climate oscillation and chlorophyll α concentrations are synchronized.[12] This study found that the chlorophyll α concentrations in seepage lakes, like Crystal Lake, tend to depend more on climate than other types of lakes, since their main water source is precipitation.[12] They also observed that algae growth is somewhat affected by climate, but there are of course other factors that contribute to it.[12]

Plant life

Geology and soil content

References

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