Author Archives: Egor Zadereev

Sinkholes burst open on banks of Dead Sea as water dries up

Yahoo News reports the ‘Nature’s revenge’ on the banks of Dead Sea (Israel). With the water level decline, because of the construction of dams, storage reservoirs and pipelines, the unique salt lake is drying up at a distressing rate.  The Dead Sea is evaporating at a rate of nearly four feet per year and large […]

Saving Iran’s great salt lake

Richard Stone. Saving Iran’s great salt lake. Science 04 Sep 2015: Vol. 349, Issue 6252, pp. 1044-1047 “Lake Urmia, in Iran’s northwestern corner, was once the planet’s sixth largest salt lake, covering about 5200 square kilometers—a bit larger than the Great Salt Lake in Utah. Flamingos, egrets, and other waterfowl feasted on brine shrimp, and […]

Lakes and reservoirs in semi-arid Mediterranean climates can become shallow and salty

A team of internationally recognized scientists highlight the growing importance of saline lake research. In new paper “Ecological impacts of global warming and water abstraction on lakes and reservoirs due to changes in water level and related changes in salinity” scientists discuss how changes in water level and salinity related to climate change and water abstraction affect […]

Salinity and Hydrology of Closed Lakes

Even thought well known for specialists in the field, this professional paper have to be used as a perfect reference on the topic of long-term balance between input and loss of salts in closed lakes. The paper is also interesting as presents hydrologic data for several closed lakes that are quite different in volume and […]

Lake Urmia: how Iran’s most famous lake is disappearing

New research published in Journal of Great Lakes Research shows Iran’s most famous lake has shrunk by nearly 90% this September. The popular story is presented by The Guardian. Ali Mirchi, Kaveh Madani and Amir AghaKouchak, coauthors of the research paper, urge action. “In the late 1990s, Lake Urmia, in north-western Iran, was twice as […]

Salton sea – an accident that will probably disappear

Preserving an Accident, the Salton Sea in California, for the Good of Nature – the article by FELICITY BARRINGER (Nov. 10, 2014) published at The New York Times. Typical story about disappearing saline lake: “In some ways, Salton’s fate is like that of other disappearing saline lakes, such as the almost-vanished Aral Sea in Central Asia […]

The top saline lake research of 2014

The annual analysis of the research activity on saline lakes in 2014 is published at the www.saltlakescience.com. The most active countires and scientists, most popular journals and research topics, top 5 paper are presented. Details are here.

Lake Qarun, Egypt designated a Ramsar Site

Egypt’s Environmental Affairs Agency has designated its first new Wetlands of International Importance since joining the Convention in 1988, two very interesting new sites in Fayoum governorate west of the Nile River. As described by Ms Charlotte Eyong, Ramsar’s Assistant Advisor for Africa, based upon the Ramsar Information Sheets, Lake Qarun Protected Area (134,042 hectares, […]

Salinity and temperature controls diatoms assemblages in alkaline, saline lakes in Central Europe

Csilla Stenger-Kovács from University of Pannonia (Hungary) with her colleagues investigated diatom assemblages and different environmental variables from 31 shallow, saline lakes from 2 different regions of the Carpathian basin (Europe) to select the principle variables affecting the diatom communities and show the relevance of diatoms as ecological bioindicators. The statistically most significant factors that […]