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Pictured Rocks National LakeshoreVisitors enjoy the view from Miners Castle as a Pictured Rocks Cruise boat passes by.
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Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore
Other Invertebrates
An NPS employee testing for water quality while in an inflatable boat on Little Chapel Lake.

NPS photo

Little Chapel Lake

Zooplankton communities vary among the lakes. In addition, these communities vary seasonally and with depth within the same lake. To date, 35 taxa of cladocerans, 11 species of calanoid and cyclopoid copepods, and two genera of rotifers have been identified from eight lakes in Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore.

As is typical, one cladoceran species, one calanoid copepod species, and one cyclopoid copepod species dominate the zooplankton community in a lake, with other species occurring at much lower relative frequencies. Dominant zooplankton taxa include the cladocerans Bosmina longirostris, Eurycercus lamellatus, Daphnia galeata mendotae, Holopedium gibberum, and Pseudochydorus globosus; the calanoid copepods Skistodiaptomus oregonensis, Epischura lacustris; the cyclopoid copepods Cyclops vernalis and Diacyclops bicuspidatus thomasi; and rotifers of the genus Keratella.

Mineral seepage creates the vibrant colors shown on this close-up photo of the Pictured Rocks cliffs.  

Did You Know?
Mineral stains give color to the famous cliffs of Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore. Red and orange colors are iron, black is manganese, white is limonite, and green is a trace of copper. There are no pictographs or petroglyphs on the Pictured Rocks cliffs (that we know of).
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Last Updated: December 04, 2006 at 13:11 EST