The influence of Mono Lake's hydrology on its ecosystem Mono Lake is located at the foot of the eastern part of the Sierra Nevada Mountains and is unique which is very important in shaping water chemistry (especially water salinity and alkalinity) and biological life I have a unique hydrologic text. Major impact. The monoreak is an extremely high salinity, highly alkaline, hydrologically closed basin, where the only natural water emissions are evaporation. The basin itself was formed by structural plate destruction occurred at least 500,000 years ago.
In 1974, David Gaines began researching the biology of Mono Lake. In 1975, at Stanford University he began to make other people interested in the ecology of Mono Lake. This led to a report on the Monorak ecosystem in 1977, highlighting the dangers posed by water conversion. In 1978, the Mono Lake Committee was established to protect Mono Lake. In 1979, the committee (and nationwide Audubon association) sued LADWP, alleging that the transfer violated the principle of public trust, navigable waters were managed for the benefit of all people It is stipulated that it must be. The lawsuit arrived in the California Supreme Court in 1983, and the Committee decided that it would benefit. Further litigation that began in 1984, alleging that LADWP does not comply with the State Fisheries Protection Act
The Mono Lake Commission is a "grass-roots" organization that prevents Mono Lake from drying when all incoming water is moved by Los Angeles Hydro (some of which consist of students of the University of California Davis ). With the help of the nationwide Audubon Society, it fought against LawDP and won a series of groundbreaking trials that far exceeded Mono Lake. It has member supporters and also uses interns and volunteers to help open the office to Li Weining. Fishery organization Fishermen have been organized over the past few years due to the diversion and contamination of fishery opportunities reduced. Their efforts to protect the creek solved a broader variety of problems, including conservation of riveral forests and other wildlife habitats. If you want to fish, you can join one of the following organizations.
Falling from 9,945 feet of Tiago to about 7,000 feet is a huge plain, and Mono Lake occupies the whole landscape. This lake is 5 times stronger in salt than sea and alkaline is also high. It has its own ecosystem and calcium carbonate soil, and mineral water contains these strange pillars through the lake. There are flies, thousands of flies, but they are not interested in us - they are all above the mineral lock on the waterside. There are several young volcanoes by Mono Lake. I swear, one of them ventilates, but we did not see it.