Loch Enoch

Loch Enoch

With Corserine, Dungeon Hill and Craignaw in the background
Location Galloway
Coordinates 55°08′10″N 4°26′20″W / 55.13611°N 4.43889°W / 55.13611; -4.43889Coordinates: 55°08′10″N 4°26′20″W / 55.13611°N 4.43889°W / 55.13611; -4.43889
Type Loch
Primary outflows Eglin Lane
Catchment area 186 ha[1]
Basin countries Scotland
Surface area 50 ha[1]
Max. depth ~36 m[1]
Surface elevation 493 m[1]
References [1]
Loch Enoch viewed from the slopes of Mullwharchar

Loch Enoch is a multi-basin loch in Galloway to the east of Merrick and south of Mullwharchar. The loch is situated in a granite basin and has several small islands and some beaches on its shore. The sharp granite sand of these beaches was collected and sold for sharpening knives and scythes.[2] The catchment area's vegetation is mainly Purple Moor Grass and Heather.[1]

The loch's outflow supplies Loch Doon and the River Doon, both in Ayrshire.

Acidification

By 1800 the water of Loch Enoch had already become acidic.[3] J. McBain in his 1929 book The Merrick and the Neighbouring Hills. Tramps by Hill, Stream and Loch describes a trout that 'bore the unmistakable marks of a Loch Enoch trout, i.e. it was minus the lower half of its tail and part of its ventral fins'.[4] McBain writes that the last recorded trout caught was in 1899. Since 1940 the loch became more acidic due to industrial emissions[3] and in the 1950s it completely lost its fish population.[5] In 1994 it was restocked with 3000 trout.[4] The loch has not become more acidic since the mid-1970s and has become slightly less acidic from the 1980s onwards,[1] with the pH increasing slowly from around 4.3 in 1978 to 4.9 in 2003.[6] Between 1983 and 2003 the loch's DOC levels increased.[7]

Water analysis

Concentrations of different elements in samples from June 2006[8]
Element Concentration μg/l
CaCO3 −500
Li 0.297
Al 83.9
V 0.263
Cr 0.147
Fe 49.3
Fe DRC 46.4
Mn 6.7
Co 0.064
Ni 0.348
Cu 0.247
Zn 3.14
Se 0.178

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Goudie, Andrew; Alexander, David (1997). Lake Acidification in Galloway. The Human Impact Reader: Readings and Case Studies. p. 201.
  2. Barratt, Edward. "'The Croft on the Flowe'". Climb Magazine. Retrieved 24 June 2008.
  3. 1 2 Dr John Kinross. "Freshwater Acidification and 'Acid Rain'". Lecture Notes for MSc Aquatic Ecosystems Management, Freshwater Ecosystems Module. Retrieved 24 June 2008. line feed character in |work= at position 53 (help)
  4. Richard W. Battarbee (1989). "The Acidification of Scottish Lochs". The Geographic Journal 155: 353–360. doi:10.2307/635210. JSTOR 635210.
  5. "Recovery from Acid Rain Gives Hope to Scottish Upland Salmonid Populations" (PDF). Fisheries Research Services. 16 August 2004. Retrieved 25 June 2008.
  6. "Freshwater Environment Group" (PDF). Fisheries Research Services. Retrieved 28 June 2008.
  7. Robinson, Craig D.; Charles, Sylvie; Malcolm, Iain A.; Devalla, Sandhya (May 2007). "FRS METHOD FOR THE DETERMINATION OF TRACE METALS (INCLUDING RARE EARTH ELEMENTS) IN FRESHWATER SAMPLES BY INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA MASS SPECTROMETRY" (PDF). Fisheries Research Services. Retrieved 28 June 2008.

External links


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