Home > All Journals > Western North American Naturalist Publications > Great Basin Naturalist > Vol. 47 (1987) > No. 4
Great Basin Naturalist
Abstract
Numerous physical, chemical, and biological criteria evidently confirm that Lake Tahoe is oligotrophic. However, detailed examination of the ecology and trophic status status of algae (mostly diatoms) from Lake Tahoe taken from three independent, long-term sampling programs aided in interpretation of plankton and periphyton algal communities by spectral analysis (supported by computerized data synthesis) and "ultra-oligotraphic" lakes over the world from which future studies may reveal algal communities that may be described as more mesotrophic and/or eutrophic than oligotrophic. Lake Tahoe probably is not as oligotrophic as is generally believed, and the indicator algae in it are not as accurate as is generally believed.
Recommended Citation
VanLandingham, Sam L.
(1987)
"Observations on the ecology and trophic status of Lake Tahoe (Nevada and California, USA) based on the algae from three independent surveys (1965–1985),"
Great Basin Naturalist: Vol. 47
:
No.
4
, Article 7.
Available at:
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/gbn/vol47/iss4/7