Study provides first data-driven definition
Cornell University
Trustom Pond. Photo by Will Collette. Cornell says this is not a pond. - Too big at 320 hectares. Ditto for Ninigret at 623 hectares. Watchaug loses its "pond" status too at 232 hectares. |
"The
lack of a universal pond definition causes a lot of confusion, from people
wondering about the difference between a pond and a lake, to aquatic monitoring
programs with different definitions across governmental agencies, even up to
accurately modeling global carbon budgets," said Meredith Holgerson,
assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology and co-first author of
"A functional definition to distinguish ponds from lakes and
wetlands," published June 21 in Scientific Reports.
"We
wanted to evaluate how scientists and policymakers define ponds and examine
whether ponds are functionally distinct from lakes and wetlands,"
Holgerson said.
Their
conclusion: Ponds are small and shallow waterbodies, with a maximum surface
area of five hectares, a maximum depth of 5 meters and less than 30% emergent
vegetation.
There are hundreds of millions or even billions of ponds globally -- more than 95% of the world's still waterbodies are small (under 10 hectares) -- but the humble pond is understudied and has been largely left out of federal and state monitoring and protection programs.
Holgerson
and her team examined how scientists defined pond in more than 500 relevant
scientific papers, coding it for different descriptors, like surface area or
depth, and whether the descriptions were qualitative or quantitative.
"We
found that there wasn't one definition that researchers all cited, and the
definitions were often qualitative, describing a pond as 'small,' for
example," Holgerson said.
The
team also conducted a survey of state agencies in charge of waterbody
monitoring and conservation. Half of the states had legislation that referenced
ponds, but only one state (Michigan) defined ponds. Other states designated
ponds as state waters or lumped them in with either lakes or wetlands.
The
researchers found that ponds are not the same as lakes or wetlands, however.
Further examination of the literature revealed that ponds have distinct
ecological structures and function that make their categorization with either
lakes or wetlands problematic.
Holgerson
and her team plotted the relationships between surface area and various metrics
of ecological structure or function. "We looked at parameters like gross
primary production, respiration, chlorophyll levels, greenhouse gas emissions,
diel temperature ranges, and the rate of gas exchange with the
atmosphere," Holgerson said. "Nine out of the 10 ecosystem parameters
related nonlinearly to surface area, suggesting that ponds really are acting
differently."
They
also examined how these ecosystem metrics related to depth and emergent
vegetation -- plants rooted in the bottom that extend to the surface -- and
again found nonlinear relationships. They used the thresholds for where
waterbody functions began to change with surface area, depth, and emergent
vegetation to arrive at their definition.
The
distinct profile and characteristics of ponds means they shouldn't be held to
the same monitoring standards as lakes or wetlands, Holgerson said. "For
example, ponds may have naturally higher nutrient concentrations and higher
methane fluxes. We may need to develop unique water quality standards for pond
monitoring."
More
research is needed to hone the definition, particularly to better understand
waterbodies at the boundaries between wetlands and ponds, and ponds and lakes,
and how size, depth, vegetation -- and other variables like how sheltered a
waterbody is -- impact the pond's functioning and its categorization.
"At
the beginning of the study, we weren't sure if our research would allow us to
propose a new definition that we felt confident about, but we think the numbers
we offer are solid and a great jumping off point for further research,"
Holgerson said. "We do call for more research, especially to look at
boundaries between wetlands, ponds, and lakes."
Holgerson
hopes the new definition will also call attention to ponds as distinct,
significant ecosystems that are worthy of study, monitoring, and protection.
"Researching and monitoring ponds can help us figure out how these
globally abundant waterbodies function. There's also an essential human element,"
Holgerson said. "So many people have connections to ponds -- they have
childhood stories of catching frogs or learning to fish in a nearby pond."
This research was supported by numerous agencies including the Global Lake Ecological Observatory Network, the National Science Foundation and the St. Olaf Collaborative Undergraduate Research and Inquiry Program.