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What type of plants and animals live in a lake. What is the climte, location on earth and how biologically?

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and how biologically diverse are they.

This is just speaking about lakes in general

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  1. it's summer, save this for the school year


  2. I guess, your question refers to the topic of freshwater ecology.

    Well, to start with, only 3% of the world's water is fresh. And 99% of this is either frozen in glaciers and pack ice or is buried in aquifers. The remainder is found in lakes, ponds, rivers, and streams.

    Lakes and Ponds

    Deep lakes contain three distinct zones, each with its characteristic communities of organisms.

    Littoral zone

    The zone close to shore. Here light reaches all the way to the bottom. The producers are plants rooted to the bottom and algae attached to the plants and to any other solid substrate. The consumers include

    tiny crustaceans

    flatworms

    insect larvae

    snails

    frogs, fish, and turtles.

    Limnetic zone

    This is the layer of open water where photosynthesis can occur. As one descends deeper in the limnetic zone, the amount of light decreases until a depth is reached where the rate of photosynthesis becomes equal to the rate of respiration. At this level, net primary production no longer occurs.

    The limnetic zone is shallower is turbid water than in clear and is a more prominent feature of lakes than of ponds.

    Life in the limnetic zone is dominated by

    floating microorganisms - called plankton

    actively swimming animals - called nekton.

    The producers in this ecosystem are planktonic algae.

    The primary consumers include such animals as microscopic crustaceans and rotifers - the so-called zooplankton.

    The secondary (and higher) consumers are swimming insects and fish. These nekton usually move freely between the littoral and limnetic zones.

    Profundal zone

    Many lakes (but few ponds) are so deep that not enough light reaches here to support net primary productivity. Therefore, this zone depends for its calories on the drifting down of organic matter from the littoral and limnetic zones.

    The profundal zone is chiefly inhabited by primary consumers that are either attached to or crawl along the sediments at the bottom of the lake.

    Such bottom-dwelling animals are called the benthos.

    The sediments underlying the profundal zone also support a large population of bacteria and fungi. The decomposers break down the organic matter reaching them, releasing inorganic nutrients for recycling.

    Fall overturn

    Where there is a pronounced change of seasons, the warming of the surface of the lake in the summer prevents this water from mixing with deeper water. This is because warm water is less dense than cold.

    The surface water becomes enriched in oxygen

    some from the air above it the rest - because it is in the limnetic zone - from photosynthesis.

    But the water in the profundal zone - being removed from both these sources - becomes stagnant.

    In the fall, however, as the surface water cools, it becomes denser and sinks to the bottom - carrying oxygen with it.

    Good luck for you !

    Kristina

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