Water (Mar 2021)

Setting the Phosphorus Boundaries for Greek Natural Shallow and Deep Lakes for Water Framework Directive Compliance

  • Ifigenia Kagalou,
  • Chrysoula Ntislidou,
  • Dionissis Latinopoulos,
  • Dimitra Kemitzoglou,
  • Vasiliki Tsiaoussi,
  • Dimitra C. Bobori

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/w13050739
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 5
p. 739

Abstract

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Eutrophication caused by nutrient enrichment is a predominant stressor leading to lake degradation and, thus, the set-up of boundaries that support good ecological status, the Water Framework Directive’s main target, is a necessity. Greece is one of the Member States that have recorded delays in complying with the coherent management goals of European legislation. A wide range of different statistical approaches has been proposed in the Best Practice Guide for determining appropriate nutrient thresholds. To determine the nutrient thresholds supporting the good status of natural Greek lakes, the phytoplankton dataset gathered from the national monitoring programme (2015–2020) was used for shallow and deep natural lakes. The regression analyses were sufficient and robust in order to derive total phosphorus thresholds that ranged from 20 to 41 μg/L in shallow and 15–32 μg/L in deep natural lake types. Nutrient boundaries that encompass the stressors these lakes are subject to, are essential in proper lake management design.

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