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The First International Lake Ladoga Symposium: Proceedings of the First International Lake Ladoga Symposium: Ecological Problems of Lake Ladoga, St. Petersburg, Russia, 22–26 November 1993 PDF

319 Pages·1996·12.812 MB·English
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Preview The First International Lake Ladoga Symposium: Proceedings of the First International Lake Ladoga Symposium: Ecological Problems of Lake Ladoga, St. Petersburg, Russia, 22–26 November 1993

The First International Lake Ladoga Symposium Developments in Hydrobiology 113 Series editor H. J. Dumont The First International Lake Ladoga Symposium Proceedings of the First International Lake Ladoga Symposium: Ecological Problems of Lake Ladoga, St. Petersburg, Russia, 22-26 November 1993 Edited by Heikki Simola, Markku Viljanen, Tatyana Slepukhina & Raj Murthy Reprinted from Hydrobiologia, vol. 322 (1996) Kluwer Academic Publishers Dordrecht I Boston I London Library of Congress Cataloging-In-Publication Data A C.I.P. Catalogue record for this book is available from the Library of Congress. ISBN-13:978-94-0 10-7240· 3 e-ISBN-13:978-94-009-1655-5 DOl: 10.1007/978-94-009-1655-5 Published by Kluwer Academic Publishers, P.O. Box 17,3300 AA Dordrecht, The Netherlands. Kluwer Academic Publishers incorporates the publishing programmes of D. Reidel, Martinus Nijhoff, Dr W. Junk and MTP Press. Sold and distributed in the U.S.A. and Canada by Kluwer Academic Publishers, 101 Philip Drive, Norwell, MA 02061, U.S.A. In all other countries, sold and distributed by Kluwer Academic Publishers, P.O. Box 322,3300 AH Dordrecht, The Netherlands. Printed on acid-free paper All Rights Reserved © 1996 Kluwer Academic Publishers Sof tcover reprint of the hardcover 1st edi tion 1996 No part of the material protected by this copyright notice may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the copyright owner. v Contents Preface ........................................................................... . lX-X List of referees .................................................................... . xi Present state of Lake Ladoga Ecological problems of Lake Ladoga: causes and solutions by V. Drabkova, V. Rumyantsev, L.V. Sergeeva & T.D. Slepukhina ................ . 1-7 The trophic state of Lake Ladoga as indicated by late summer phytoplankton by A.-L. Holopainen, P. Huttunen, G.1. Letanskaya & E.V. Protopopova ........... . 9-16 Bacterioplankton response to eutrophication in Lake Ladoga by L. Kapustina .............................................................. . 17-22 Bottom sediments and biocoenoses of northern Ladoga and their changes under human impact by T.D. Slepukhina, LV. Belyakova, Y.A. Chichikalyuk, N.N. Davydova, G.T. Frumin, E.M. Kruglov, E.A. Kurashov, E.V. Rubleva, L.V. Sergeeva & D. Subetto .......... . 23-28 Meiofauna of the profundal zone of the northern part of Lake Ladoga as an indicator of pollution by J. Sarkka ................................................................. . 29-38 Littoral zone of Lake Ladoga: ecological state evaluation by I.M. Raspopov,I.N. Andronikova, O.N. Dotsenko, E.A. Kurashov, G.1. Letanskaya, V.E. Panov, M.A. Rychkova, LV. Telesh, O.A. Tchernykh & F.F. Vorontsov ........ . 39-47 Invertebrate communities associated with macrophytes in Lake Ladoga: effects of environ mental factors by E.A. Kurashov, LV. Telesh, V.E. Panov, N.V. Usenko & M.A. Rychkova ........ . 49-55 Fishery of Lake Ladoga - past, present and future by L.K. Kudersky, J. Jurvelius, M. Kaukoranta, P. Tuunainen & K. Makinen ........ . 57-64 Hydrodynamics of Lake Ladoga and other large water bodies New morphometrical data of Lake Ladoga by A.I. Sorokin, M.A. Naumenko & M.F. Veselova ........................ ; ..... . 65-67 Main features of the thermal regime of Lake Ladoga during the ice-free period by M.A. Naumenko, S.G. Karetnikov & A.1. Tikhomirov ......................... . 69-73 Numerical modelling of large-scale ciruclation in Lakes Onega and Ladoga by D.V. Beletsky ............................................................. . 75-80 Density structure of the fine surface water layer of large lakes and remote measurement of the temperature by G.N. Panin & S.G. Karetnikov .............................................. . 81-84 vi Physicallimnological processes under ice by B.C. Kenney............................................................... 85-90 Mixing in ice-covered lakes by L. Bengtsson .. .......... .. ..... ............... .................... ....... .. 91-97 The influence of seasonal and year-to-year variability of water discharge from the Lake Ladoga - Neva River system on the salinity regime of the Baltic Sea by N.V. Myakisheva .... ..... ..... ........ .... .. . ....... ........ ..... . . ... ... .. 99-102 The estimation of current state of Lake Ladoga using mathematical models by A.v. Leonov, N.N. Filatov & V.S. Titov ... ... .... ............... ....... ..... .. 103-108 Particle pathways of Niagara river water in Lake Ontario affecting bottom sediment contami- nation by C.R. Murthy ............................................................... 109-116 Water currents and spreading of river load in Lake Pyhaselka, Saimaa, Finland by T. Huttula, J. Koponen, K. Lehtinen, A. Wahlgren & R. Niinioja ................ 117-124 Water quality and pollution Joint Russian-Finnish study of radioactive contamination in the NW part of Lake Ladoga by Z.G. Gritchenko, L.M. Ivanova, Y.A. Panteleev, N.A. Tishkova, T.K. Ikaheimonen, E. Ilus & R. Saxen ............................................................ 125-128 Distribution and release of sedimentary phosphorus in Lake Ladoga by N.V. Ignatieva ............................................................. 129-136 Ecologic and hygienic evaluation of Lake Ladoga as a source of drinking water by L.V. Vorobieva, G.v. Selyuzhitskii & G.I. Chemova .. .. ........ ..... .. . ........ 137-141 Lake Ladoga: chemical pollution and biochemical self-purification by G.T. Frumin, O.A. Chemykh, N.L. Krylenkova & V.A. Scherbak ..... ....... .. .. 143-147 A survey on toxicity of cyanobacterial blooms in Lake Ladoga and adjacent water bodies by B.V. Gromov, A.A. Vepritsky, K.A. Mamkaeva & L.N. Voloshko ................ 149-151 Mathematical model for the ecosystem response of Lake Ladoga to phophorus loading by G.P. Astrakhantsev, N.B. Yegorova, v.v. Menshutkin, LV. Pisulin & L.A. Rukhovets 153-157 The impact of effluents of Pitkaranta pulp mill on the water quality of Lake Ladoga: a model study by K. Granberg ............................................................... 159-166 Protein indication method in monitoring of pulp mill effluent pollution in Lake Ladoga by T.N. Nizharadze & A.M. Tomilin ............................................ 167-171 Ecological studies of Lake Ladoga biota Zooplankton characteristics in monitoring of Lake Ladoga by I.N. Andronikova .. .. ... ..... .. ... ..... ..... ..... ..... ............ .. .. . .. .. . 173-179 Species composition of planktonic Rotifera, Cladocera and Copepoda in the littoral zone of Lake Ladoga by I.V. Telesh ... .............. ..... ............... ..... ..... ... .. ..... ... ..... 181-185 Vll Establishment of the Baika1ian endemic amphipod, Gmelinoides jasciatus Stebb. in Lake Ladoga by V.E. Panov ................................................................ 187-192 The Ladoga seal (Phoca hispida ladogensis Nordq.) by T. Sipi1a, N.V. Medvedev & H. Hyvarinen .................................... 193-198 History of Lake Ladoga and rates of change in its environment Late-and postglacial history of lakes of the Karelian Isthmus by N.N. Davydova, K.A. Arslanov, v.1. Khomutova, 1.1. Krasnov, D.B. Malakhovsky, M. Saarnisto, A.1. Saksa & D.A. Subetto . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 199-204 Shoreline displacement of Lake Ladoga - new data from Kilpolansaari by M. Saarnisto & T. Gronlund.... ... .......... .. .......... ..... ... .. ..... .. ... 205-215 Lake Ladoga Region: human impacts and recent environmental changes by G.A. Isachenko ............................................................ 217-221 Atmospheric deposition of sulphur, nitrogen and base cations in Scots pine stands of south- eastern Finland and the Karelian Isthmus, NW Russia in 1992 by I. Lumme & V. Arkhipov .................................................... 223-226 Research methods for large lakes Combined application of remote sensing and in situ measurements in monitoring environmen tal processes by K.Ya. Kondratyev, L.P. Bobylev, D.V. Pozdnyakov, v.v. Melentyev, M.A. Nau menko, K.A. Mokievsky, O.E. Korotkerich, L.V. Zaitsev, S.G. Karetnikov, D.V. Beletsky & A.V. Litvinenko .................................................... 227-232 Combined use of spectral brightness and polarization characteristics of upward radiation in remote sensing of inland waterbodies by A.A. Buznikov, G.A. Lakhtanov, K.A. Mokievsky, V.B. Rumyantsev & S.G. Shvare- va ........................................................................... 233-236 Mathematical modelling of runoff and material transport from drainage areas into recipient water bodies by S.A. Kondratyev & O. Mendel. ................. ..... ............... ..... .. . . 237-240 Water chemistry of Lake Ladoga and Russian-Finnish intercalibration of analyses by R. Niinioja, M. Manninen & P. Lozovik ....................................... 241-248 Comparison of methods used in zooplankton sampling and counting in the joint Russian- Finnish evaluation of the trophic state of Lake Ladoga by I. Karjalainen, M. Rahkola, M. Viljanen, LN. Andronikova & V.A. Avinskii ...... 249-253 Phytoplankton composition and pigment concentrations as indicators of water quality in the Rybinsk reservoir by L.G. Korneva & N.M. Mineeva .............................................. 255-259 The relationship between fish yield and primary production in large European freshwater lakes by G.M. Lavrentyeva & P.I. Lavrentyev ......................................... 261-266 viii Spatial patterns and relationships between phytoplankton, zooplankton and water quality in the Saimaa lake system, Finland by 1. Karjalainen, A.-L. Holopainen & P. Huttunen ............................... 267-276 Structural phase diagrams of animal communities in assessment of freshwater ecosystem conditions by V.B. Verbitskii & V.G. Tereshchenko ......................................... 277-282 Palaeolimnological analyses as information source for large lake biomonitoring by H. Simola, 1.1. Meriliiinen, O. Sandman, V. Marttila, H. Karjalainen, M. Kukkonen, R. lulkunen-Tiitto & 1. Hakulinen .................... , . .... ... . . .. . .. . . .... . .... 283-292 Comparison of sampling methods for semipelagic animals in two deep basins of Lake Saimaa by P. Bagge, H.-M. Liimatainen & P. Liljaniemi .................................. 293-300 Sample size in the monitoring of benthic macrofauna in the profundal of lakes: evaluation of the precision of estimates by H. Veijola, 1. Meriliiinen & V. Marttila ........................................ 301-315 Subject index. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 317-325 Author index ...................................................................... 327-328 Hydrobiologia 322: ix-x, 1996. ix H. Simola et al. (eds), The First International Lake Ladoga Symposium. Preface Lake Ladoga is the largest lake in Europe, and with its surface area of 17,891 km2 and volume of 837 km3 ranks among the top fifteen of the world's freshwater bodies. The ecological condition of Lake Ladoga is of concern to several million people: it is affected by those living on its 258,000 km2 drainage area, which covers much of northwestern European Russia and eastern Finland; and it affects the 6 million inhabitants of St. Petersburg for whom Lake Ladoga is the main source of domestic and industrial water. Furthermore, the condition of Lake Ladoga affects water quality in the Neva River, the Gulf of Finland and the whole Baltic Sea. The ecological state of Lake Ladoga seems to have deteriorated, especially since the 1970's. Conditions at some of the worst polluted sites have actually improved in recent years, due to the closing of some sources of industrial pollution; but there are alarming signs of general eutrophication of the main body of water. Owing to its vast water mass, Lake Ladoga is slow to react to environmental change. Joint Russian-Finnish studies of Lake Ladoga and its environment have been conducted since 1990 within the framework of cooperation in environmental protection between the two countries. From this cooperation also emerged the need to arrange an international symposium to address the current environmental problems of Lake Ladoga. To this end, an organizing committee consisting of Russian and Finnish scientists involved in Lake Ladoga research was formed in 1992. Prof. Vladislav Rumyantsev (St. Petersburg) was nominated as chairman and Dr. Markku Viljanen (Joensuu) as vice-chairman of the committee. The first international Lake Ladoga Symposium was held in st. Petersburg on 22-26 November, 1993. The symposium was organized jointly by the University of Joensuu, Finland, and the Institute of Limnology, Russian Academy of Sciences. The symposium, which was held in St. Petersburg, marked the 50th anniversary of the Institute of Limnology. The theme of the symposium was Ecological Problems of Lake Ladoga. This theme quite naturally expanded to include research on other large lakes as well, because the problems of large lakes are much the same, and large lake studies are pursued in several countries. An international symposium focusing on large lake research in general, and Lake Ladoga research in particular, thus emerged. There were about 160 participants from Russia, Finland, Canada and Sweden. The setting of the Symposium was magnificent as well as appropriate: an old palace on the embankment of the Great Neva River, once the home of members of the Czar family, now serving as the House of Scientists. The programme, consisting of a total of 98 contributions, was organized into the following sessions: Present state of Lake Ladoga, Rates of change in the ecosystem of Lake Ladoga, Ecological standards and criteria for assessing water quality, Research methods for large lakes, Ecological strategy for Lake Ladoga and its basin, and a poster session. In order to bring the environmental problems of Lake Ladoga to the attention of the appropriate authorities, the following resolution was adopted by the participants at the closing session of the symposium: Participants of the i st international Lake Ladoga Symposium met in St. Petersburg to discuss the state of Lake Ladoga and waterbodies of its basin. Recommendations relevant to the improvement of the ecosystem of one of the largest freshwater bodies of the world have been considered, and the participants of the symposium would like to emphasize the necessity of broadening international cooperation at both governmental and scientific levels. A continuing serious deterioration of the ecological state of Lake Ladoga will have serious health and social effects on the population of St. Petersburg. It will also have a serious impact on the ecological state of the Baltic Sea, which will heighten concern in neighbouring countries. The participants are also unanimous about the need to draw up a comparative analysis between the states of the large lakes in North America and Europe. This would be useful for assessment of both global and regional changes. x The participants of the Symposium urge all governmental and non-governmental organizations of Russia, Finland and other countries to pay more attention to the very serious ecological condition of European lakes and of the Baltic Sea. We believe that it is also important to support all international projects and agreements which could offer protection and restoration of inland bodies of water. This would ensure the possibility of safeguarding these lakes for future generations. The participants consider it desirable to arrange the next Symposium three years from now, in order to assess the ongoing changes and to work out adequate solutions to the environmental problems of Lake Ladoga. Ladoga, the largest water-basin in Europe and one of the greatest and most beautiful lakes in the world, is worth being included in UNESCO's list of world's natural heritage sites in accordance with the Convention Concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage. The symposium contributions are summarized in two publications: (I) A volume of Extended Abstracts of all the presentations has already been published at the University of Joensuu, Publications of Karelian Institute 112 (1995); (2) about half of the presentations have been edited into this special issue after the normal refereeing procedure. The Symposium organizers wish to acknowledge the following bodies for financial and other support for the symposium: the Russian Academy of Sciences, the Academy of Finland, the Finnish Ministry of the Environment, the Maj and Tor Nessling Foundation and the University of Joensuu. As editors of this special issue, we wish to thank Ms. Tuula Toivanen and Mr. Maxim Brezhnev, who acted as secretaries for the symposium. Tuula Toivanen, Mr. Olli Gunther, Ms. Sirkka Staff and Ms. Kirsti Kyyronen provided invaluable help with the preparation of the manuscripts. Without their great effort, the publication of this volume within a reasonable time would not have been possible. HEIKKI SIMOLA, MARKKU VILJANEN Univ. Joensuu, Finland TATYANA SLEPUKHINA Inst. Limnology, St. Petersburg, Russia RAJASEKARA MURTHY National Water Res. Institute, Burlington, Canada

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