Friday, 6 July 2012

Dive in Llyn Gwynant 24/6/2012

Recent weather prevented a sea dive due to high winds and poor viz of late. A freshwater recce dive was organised at Llyn Gwynant This site was a previously unknown to the Club however we had a successful dive from the little gravel beach by the road. 
6 of us took bearings across the lake in 3 pairs. 1 pair headed across to Elephant Rock and recorded a depth of 12ms. The other 2 pairs remained in the shallower waters which extend quite a long way across from the beach, and contain abundant weed beds. There seems to be a very clear cutoff depth of about 5ms after which there is very little weed.
Visibility was measured using an Opalometer and came in at 10-11 opals out of 12 ( a simple method of ascertaining clarity). If you're interested in making your own water clarity very very low tech device go to http://www.opalexplorenature.org/ (part of Natural History Museum activities)
  
 The rather blurred small fish is likely to be 3 spined stickleback. Probably a female at this time of year; breeding males are spectacular with a bright red breast and azure eye.



Green sacs, unknown -lots of these around weeds




< The green weed on lake bed picture is a nice shot of a stonewort bed, most probably Chara sp. (Nitella is the other common genus but this is
usually a bit more transparent). Chara virgata has been recorded from Llyn Gwynant in 2007 so it could be this one. Looks like quite a healthy bed.


   




A lot of filamentous algae, growing mainly over Isoetes by the look of it.>

 




< Most likely to be a water mite. There are quite a few species of water mite and some of them are bright red. They tend to swim through the water column in a busy manner. Adults are predatory, juveniles parasitise water beetles and bugs.

 Various Sponges were spotted....Spongillida sp - USB microscope 25x mag.
  

Various weeds were evident as was a water beetle!!



 

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