Mud manifests history of clear water in murky Minnesota duck depot Lake 
Christina:
Implications for ducks, fish, and landscape management

During peak migration days in the early 1900s, tens of thousands of canvasback 
ducks could be seen floating and diving on Minnesota's Lake Christina. Since 
midcentury, changes to the lake have diminished this grand, iconic spectacle. 
Restoring it will require both top-down control of life in the lake, and 
bottom-up management of the surrounding landscape. So says a team of Minnesota 
scientists calling on extensive modern records and 200 years of history trapped 
in sediment, in a report released online last week in the journal Ecological 
Applications.

"Lake Christina is very important for the region culturally, and ecologically," 
said Will Hobbs, a scientist at the Science Museum of Minnesota and lead author 
of the report. "The lake is a significant stop-over for waterfowl migrating 
along the Mississippi Flyway, but it has been compromised since the 1950s."

Lake Christina has an unusually long history of management, offering a unique 
opportunity to study the effects of biological manipulations and management.

In the 1950s, the lake's clear water darkened to a green algal soup.  By 
calibrating sediment cores to 25 years of modern records, the research team 
learned that Lake Christina had had clear waters for 100 years prior to 
European settlement in the late nineteenth century - the clear water was a 
stable state, and not an historical aberration. But now the lake is in a 
stable, murky state.

Managers have been struggling to regain clear waters in the lake for migrating 
waterfowl, particularly the big, rusty-headed canvasbacks. The ducks need a 
healthy meal of submerged aquatic plants to fuel their journey, but the dense 
algae blocks out so much sunlight that underwater plants like sago pondweed and 
wild celery can't grow.

A similar loss of submerged aquatic plants has developed at the canvasbacks' 
major historic wintering grounds on Chesapeake Bay.

"Life is not easy for a duck. You need those areas where you can stop and rest 
- large open expanses of shallow water with readily available food," said 
author Mark Hanson, a research scientist with the Minnesota Department of 
Natural Resources.

Two factors led to the clouding of the waters: an influx of nutrients from 
agriculture fed the algae, and a dam built in 1936 led to a fall in the 
population of tiny, algae-eating zooplankton. The dam doubled the depth of the 
lake, from two feet to four, allowing fish that eat zooplankton to survive the 
winter, and thrive.

To make the lake attractive for ducks, managers killed most of the fish in 
1965, 1987, and 2003, each time achieving only temporary success. Within a 
decade, the fish recovered, and the algae followed.

Restoration of wetlands surrounding the lake has not, as yet, met hopes for 
lowered nutrient levels.

"It's very difficult to get the nutrients out of the lake," said author Kyle 
Zimmer, an associate professor at the University of St. Thomas who has studied 
the fish at Lake Christina for several years. "We know from the literature that 
these things can take time, and maybe top-down, active management allows that 
time, or at least simulates the outcome we want, even if a self-maintained 
stable state is not achieved."

Managers walk a fine line, balancing short and long term needs, and balancing 
the interests of ducks and duck hunters at Lake Christina with those of 
recreational anglers. This fall, top-down management will include a series of 
pumps and pipes installed to draw-down the water level, mimicking the natural 
winter fish kill.

"The study presents compelling evidence that, in the long run, managers need to 
focus on strategies that target landscapes, not just  the food webs in the 
lakes themselves - bearing in mind that the short term is also important," said 
Hanson. "The people that live here today are very much in this culture of ducks 
and migratory water birds, and the incredible history around them. When we get 
all sectors working on lake ecology together, that's a very productive basis 
for the future."
###


Students at North Dakota State University, in collaboration with the Minnesota 
Department of Natural Resources, contributed significant contemporary data to 
this project from long term monitoring efforts at Lake Christina.

"A 200-year perspective on alternative stable state theory and lake management 
from a biomanipulated shallow lake" was published online, ahead of print, on 19 
March 2012. It is slated for the July edition of Ecological Applications. doi: 
10.1890/11-1485.1. To obtain a pdf, or associated images, contact Liza Lester.
http://www.esajournals.org/doi/abs/10.1890/11-1485.1



__________________________
__________________________
Liza Lester
Communications Officer
Ecological Society of America
1990 M Street, NW
Suite 700
Washington DC  20036
202.833.8773 ext. 211
202.833.8775 Fax
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