ARTÍCULO
Abundance and morphometry changes across the high mountain lake-size gradient in the tropical Andes of Southern Ecuador
Fecha
2017Registro en:
1944-7973
10.1002/2017WR020902
Autor
Mosquera Vintimilla, Pablo Vernardo
Hampel , Henrietta
Vazquez Zambrano, Raul Fernando
Alonso , Miguel
Catalan , Jordi
Institución
Resumen
The number, size, and shape of lakes are key determinants of the ecological functionality of a
lake district. The lake area scaling relationships with lake number and volume enable upscaling
biogeochemical processes and spatially considering organisms’ metapopulation dynamics. These
relationships vary regionally depending on the geomorphological context, particularly in the range of lake
area <1 km2 and mountainous regions. The Cajas Massif (Southern Ecuador) holds a tropical mountain lake
district with 5955 water bodies. The number of lakes deviates from a power law relationship with the lake
area at both ends of the size range; similarly to the distributions found in temperate mountain ranges. The
deviation of each distribution tail does not respond to the same cause. The marked relief limits the size of
the largest lakes at high altitudes, whereas ponds are prompt to a complete infilling. A bathymetry survey
of 202 lakes, selected across the full-size range, revealed a volume-area scaling coefficient larger than those
found for other lake areas of glacial origin but softer relief. Water renewal time is not consistently proportional
to the lake area due to the volume-area variation in midsize lakes. The 85% of the water surface is in
lakes >104 m2 and 50% of the water resources are held in a few ones ( 10) deeper than 18 m. Therefore,
midlakes and large lakes are by far more biogeochemically relevant than ponds and shallow lakes in this
tropical mountain lake district.