Want this question answered?
Found it. Its oligotrophic.
I want to say yes. Lake Michigan is not Oligotrophic like Lake George in New York. It isn't Eutrophic or Hypereutrophic which are characterized by high levels of nitrogen and phosphorus and low levels of oxygen near the bottom of the lake.
eutrotrophic
Add nutrients (phosphorus, nitrogen, etc.)
Lake Vostok is the best, example this lake lies beneath the Antarctic and has been isolated for some 15 million years
A lake or a pond ya bozo, they still speak english!!!!
A lake is bigger than a pond.
A pond is a smaller Lake.
Well this answers part ofthe Q. I did an experiment at uni that produced an oli. We had a final pH of about 8.2 ish
The lake is bigger than the pond.
ocean,lake and pond
Oligotrophic refers generally to ecosystems which have very little nutrients to sustain life. These can be very salty lakes or soils with a very low nitrogen content.An oligotrophic lake is that with plenty of oxygen but deficient of nutrients for plant growth.