Regions: North Slave Region
Tags: physical sciences, water quality, environmental monitoring, zooplankton, invertebrates
Principal Investigator: | Gray, Derek K (9) |
Licence Number: | 16647 |
Organization: | Wilfrid Laurier University |
Licensed Year(s): |
2020
2019
|
Issued: | Dec 20, 2019 |
Project Team: | Derek Gray, Heidi Swanson, Bruce Hanna, Pete Cott |
Objective(s): To establish a long-term monitoring program in Frame Lake to monitor water quality, zooplankton, and benthic invertebrates.
Project Description: This licence has been issued for the scientific research application No.4640. The research team is planning to establish a long-term monitoring program in Frame Lake to monitor water quality, zooplankton and benthic invertebrates. Water quality probes will be set up at a central monitoring point on the lake. A buoy will be anchored to the lake bottom and the probes will be attached to the buoy. The probes will monitor temperature, dissolved oxygen, pH, and conductivity levels near the surface and at locations near to the lake bottom. The probes will be installed after the ice-off in spring and will remain in the lake until the end of the summer. This will provide a continuous record of physical conditions in the lake throughout the summer. Approximately 5 liters of water will also be collected periodically from the lake for analysis at the laboratory. These samples will be analyzed for nutrients, metals, dissolved organic and inorganic carbon, major ions, and chlorophyll a. In combination with the data from the probes, these measurements will allow the team to gain a clearer picture of the water quality in Frame Lake. To assess the invertebrate community, the research team will collect zooplankton and macroinvertebrate samples at least twice per year. Zooplankton are microscopic invertebrates that live in the open water and are important food items for young fish. They will be collected by towing a 30 cm diameter conical zooplankton net vertically through the water from the bottom to the surface. Macroinvertebrates include juvenile insects, worms, as well as other invertebrates such as leeches that live on the lake bottom. These will be collected using standard methods by wading into the lake and kicking the bottom to disturb sediments while scooping up sediment and invertebrates with a D-shaped net. Approximately 3 square meters of lake bottom will be temporarily disturbed to collect macroinvertebrates. Both zooplankton and macroinvertebrates will be processed at the laboratory to ascertain the quantity and identity of species in the samples. These data will allow the team to examine if changes in invertebrates occur after the installation of an aerator on the lake. The research team is planning to pursue three avenues to communicate the results to communities in the NWT: 1) The team will approach ecology north about participating in a public presentation about the project; 2) The team will request a meeting with the Land and Environment Department of the Yellowknife Dene First Nation to talk about the results; 3) The team will seek out local media coverage about the project so that local residents will be informed about the project and the results. The fieldwork for this study will be conducted from January 1, 2020 to December 31, 2020.