Disclaimer & Copyright Notices; Optimized for the MS Rdge
Morris Lake, Dartmouth
Soil & Water Conservation Society of Metro Halifax (SWCSMH)
Updated: August 08, 2018
Caution: Since Morris is a shallow lake, the standard limnetic (i.e., open water) trophic parameters may not represent the true trophic status of the lake
Acknowledgements
Contents
Chemical vs Biological monitoring
Select scientific modelling and chemical/biological limnology are part of our miscellaneous archives
The bathymetric map; the morphological data; the watershed map; the location map; the flow chart of the Cow Bay River watershed; peruse our predictive modelling, and view a relevant model; the paleolimnology of lakes in HRM
- MORRIS Lake, Dartmouth:- Enriched-
comparison with HRM's data of 2006-2011, and suggested restoration
parameters but the zoobenthos in 1998 showed surprisingly fair to good
water quality; February 23, 2014
- Deep station total phosphorus (TP)- comparison with our hindcast models; October 18, 2013
- Phosphorus:- Details on LCC (Lake Carrying Capacity)/Threshold
values of lakes, and comparison with artificially high values chosen by
the HRM; March 14, 2014
Total stormwater treatment recommended:
Total stormwater treatment should also include removal of other urban pollutants as well, not just phosphorus! The CDS technology, the Stormceptor, and the Vortechnics are superb devices for pre-treatment, but they have to be followed by sophisticated polishing systems, for example a scientifically designed wetland with the attendant maintenance in perpetuity! This combination may or may not work (see the note of caution).
A note of caution: There have been conflicting results in the long term removal of typical stressors in storm drainage
using constructed (or engineered) wetlands. Further, such wetlands have
not had a successful history in the amelioration of acid drainage in
HRM. Hence, the only sustainable methodology would be treatment of
urban and suburban stormwater by traditional wastewater treatment plants (WWTP)
based on the tertiary removal process in the case of stressed lakes!
This implies considerable capital costs and operation & maintenance.
Concerns of stakeholders (there were many others during the early 1990s)
Acknowledgements
Google Earth for the maps!