Environmental impact statement Crane Lake development Saskatchewan. Environmental Management Associates
Material type: TextPublication details: SK : 1981Online resources: Abstract: Ducks Unlimited (Canada), a non-profit organization has proposed the construction of a wetland habitat conservation area within Crane Lake, a large relict lake basin in southwestern Saskatchewan (Figure 1).Although the lake basin has historically been subjected to fluctuating water levels, recent upstream utilization of the waters of Bear and Piapot creeks, principally for irrigation purposes, has reduced Crane Lake's water supply by approximately 50 percent. This fact, coupled with the lake basin's high rates of evaporation and water infiltration into surrounding sands have resulted in a significant reduction in wildlife utilization of this formerly large and productive marsh. Ducks Unlimited (Canada) proposes to create a more permanent wetland within Crane Lake by confining the remainder of available water within a smaller, circular area and thereby restoring some of the former wildlife value to the lake basin (Figure 2). Water in excess of the enclosure's optimal needs would be reItem type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Ducks Unlimited (Canada), a non-profit organization has proposed the construction of a wetland habitat conservation area within Crane Lake, a large relict lake basin in southwestern Saskatchewan (Figure 1).Although the lake basin has historically been subjected to fluctuating water levels, recent upstream utilization of the waters of Bear and Piapot creeks, principally for irrigation purposes, has reduced Crane Lake's water supply by approximately 50 percent. This fact, coupled with the lake basin's high rates of evaporation and water infiltration into surrounding sands have resulted in a significant reduction in wildlife utilization of this formerly large and productive marsh. Ducks Unlimited (Canada) proposes to create a more permanent wetland within Crane Lake by confining the remainder of available water within a smaller, circular area and thereby restoring some of the former wildlife value to the lake basin (Figure 2). Water in excess of the enclosure's optimal needs would be re