Lake aeration adds vital oxygen that in conjunction with beneficial bacteria helps break down muck, algae, and sediment. Naturally aerating lakes increases their longevity and keeps them healthy for fish and other wildlife.
The Solution to Lake Pollution -
Lake Restoration using a Lake Aerator System
As more and more people use lakes and
live near lakes, more and more nutrients and sediments wash into
watersheds, and pollute lakes. Fertilizer, waste, and soil run-off
wash into watersheds and lakes decreasing oxygen levels, increasing
water temperature, algae blooms, weeds, harmful bacteria, nasty
odors, and fish kills.
To achieve lake restoration, the lake
must assimilate the nutrient load that it receives. It is possible to
do this by reducing nutrient inputs, dredging muck out of the bottom
of the lake where possible, and by using a series of lake aerator
units and beneficial bacteria to accelerate the natural self-cleaning
processes already in lakes by incorporating dissolved oxygen back
into the water and allowing the bacteria to break down the lake muck.
A normal healthy lake cleans itself
because the food chain of organisms in its ecosystem absorbs
nutrients. All the way at the bottom of the lake food chain,
beneficial aerobic bacteria eat nutrients. This self-cleaning
mechanism in the lake works very well unless too many nutrients and
pollution overwhelms the food chain. If this happens, the lake
begins to die and algae and weeds take hold. Dead algae and weeds
begin rotting on the bottom, adding even more nutrients back into the
water. This depletes the oxygen at the bottom of the pond, and sets
up the perfect environment for a new algae bloom in the dying lake.
The temptation in Lake restoration is
to apply a quick fix by adding chemicals and herbicides killing weeds
quickly. The problem with this approach is that more rotting
vegetation accumulates in the bottom of the lake, further depleting
the oxygen levels. If enough of these chemicals are used, they can be
toxic to fish.
Applying a Lake Aerator
An environmentally friendly and more
effective method of Lake restoration is to increase dissolved
oxygen levels so that nutrients decompose aerobically. Adding
aerobic bacteria to the lake, accompanied by a several lake aerator
units providing the necessary dissolved oxygen will successfully
decompose the organic sediments and allow the lake to clean itself
once again. Maintaining this oxygen rich lake environment will also
reduce the amount of accumulated organic sediments. With aerobic
conditions present at the bottom of the lake, the food chain is
restored, and algae and weeds do not have a chance to escalate.
| About the author |
Sue McCrossin is a freelance writer working with CLEAN-FLO to inform people about how a lake aerator system can be an environmentally sound way of reducing lake weeds,toxins & hence improve water quality. |
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