Search results for "Gravel pit"
showing 2 items of 2 documents
Are there steady-state phytoplankton assemblages in the field?
2003
The difficulty in advancing in Ecology is due, in part, to the fact that this science uses a mainly qualitative language instead of a more formal or mathematical one. Therefore, many ecologists' efforts are expended in controversies resulting from the vagueness of ecological concepts, for example: stability, equilibrium, ecosystem, community, and so on. When approaching the study of steady-state phytoplankton assemblage, the different interpretations of these concepts can paralyse fruitful discussion. In the following pages, there is an endeavour to both restrict and precise the meaning of some of the concepts related to this topic and to broaden the range of possibilities of steady-state i…
That twenty years is nothing for gravel-pit limnology
2020
[EN] The past twenty years have witnessed a rise in the analysis of long-term limnological data given the need to know whether global warming is affecting freshwaters, and if so, how. Previous studies indicated that processes affecting ecosystem function-ing may develop slowly, thus requiring long-term study, as in the case of the eutrophication-oligotrophication gradient. Here we report annual averages and seasonal variability of meteorological data (air temperature, solar radiation, rainfall) and the main limnological variables (lake level, water temperature, euphotic depth, mixing depth, nitrogen and phosphorus compounds and phytoplankton biomass) for a gravel-pit, seepage lake close to …