Mike Axsome... Biological Question
Mike,
I remember back in biology in high school, our Bio. teacher once gave us a biological definition of lakes vs. ponds.
She said a lake is any body of water that is deep enough that the sunlight does not penetrate all the way to the bottom, everything else is considered a pond.
Can you tell me if this is correct? I'm pretty old, and that definition came from 1974. OK, so maybe I'm not pretty.. but am old, or at least feel old. LOL
Thanks Mike.
Tight lines and God Bless
Danny
RE: Mike Axsome... Biological Question
Well, light penetration is one factor. This is one of those questions that can only be answered in general terms, because every rule you set seems to have an exception. But generally lakes are larger and deeper; and have ecosystems that are shaped by those factors. Ponds are smaller and shallower; and have ecosystems shaped by those factors.
Here is a link to the EPA discussion on the subject.
[url]http://www.epa.gov/bioindicators/aquatic/lake-r.html[/url]
Now, we could also get technical and discuss the difference between a lake and a reservoir.
RE: Mike Axsome... Biological Question
A reservoir is any body of water that is located on an Indian reservation. Voir is the Indian tribe Wachachita word for lake.
topwater
RE: Mike Axsome... Biological Question
Thanks! I was not aware of that.
RE: Mike Axsome... Biological Question
If I can't put it on plane and run for at least 5-10 minutes, then it's a pond. :-)