A 5-acre pond can hold approximately 1.65 million gallons of water if it has an average depth of about 5 feet. This volume can vary significantly based on the actual depth of the pond. For example, a deeper pond would hold more water, while a shallower one would hold less.
One acre of wetlands can store up to 360,000 gallons of water One acre of wetlands can store up to 360,000 gallons of water
Approximately 8,146,286 gallons of water.
Approximately 48,878,000 gallons.
Approximately 977,553 gallons of water.
A pond this size holds up to about 1,955,108 gallons of water.
A 25-acre pond that is uniformly 6 feet deep will hold about 48,877,714 gallons of water.
Six acre-feet of water is about 1,955,109 US gallons.
One acre-foot is about 325,851 US gallons.
1,135 acre-feet of water equates to 369,841,371 US gallons.
43560x7x7.48052=2,280,960.1584
I'm assuming you mean acre feet of water. If that is the case, then there are 325,850.58 gallons in one acre foot of water or 4,887,758.7 gallons of water in 15 acre feet of water.
A 1000 acre lake that is 7 feet deep (uniformly) will have 7000 acre feet of water in it. An acre foot is an acre of water one foot deep, and the unit is used to measure reservoir water capacity. The conversion factor is that one acre foot equals about 325,851.5 gallons. The lake in question is holding 7000 times 325,851.5 gallons of water.