In the summer of 2012, a team of researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Center for Limnology and Wright State University in Ohio, will call the shores of Africa’s Lake Tanganyika home.
The oldest and deepest of the African rift lakes, Tanganyika is a natural wonder under severe threat. What’s more, it’s near-shore ecosystem contains a paradoxical combination of scarce nutrients but globally-high primary productivity, animal biomass and a diversity of grazing fish and invertebrates. What supports such a thriving ecosystem when there’s little nutrient input to the lake? Our sleuths have set out to Tanzania to find out.
Understanding how “Lake T” works is imperative in order to protect its remarkable biodiversity ( there are more than 700 endemic animal species) and the essential services (fisheries, clean water, transportation) it provides to the citizens of the four countries lining its shores.
Our own Ellen Hamann, lab manager for Professor Pete McIntyre, is currently with Pete and the rest of the crew in Africa. She recently recapped a day in the field…
There is no typical day in the field, I guess…but what we do on any given day depends on a few things:
8:30am – Start packing up the gear we’ll need for the day (snail quadrats, fish quadrats, plum lines, whirl pacs, dive tanks, BCD’s, regs, snorkel stuff, wetsuits-that-reek-of-urine, our lunch!) into the smallest space possible and walk it down to the water.