Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Lake Ikeda

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Location
  
Kyūshū island

Basin countries
  
Japan

Average depth
  
135 m (443 ft)

Area
  
11 km²

Shore length
  
15.1 km

Volume
  
1.47 km³

Type
  
caldera lake

Surface area
  
11 km (4.2 sq mi)

Max. depth
  
233 m (764 ft)

Surface elevation
  
66 m

Mean depth
  
135 m

Catchment area
  
41 km²

Lake Ikeda staticpanoramiocomphotoslarge9882165jpg

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Beautiful japan flower nanohana garden at lake ikeda video guide travel to kagoshima japan


Lake Ikeda (池田湖, Ikeda-ko) is a caldera lake located 40 km south of Kagoshima city; Kyūshū island, Japan. It is perhaps best known to tourists as the location of the purported sightings of a monster named Issie, and as the largest lake on Kyūshū island with a surface area of 11 km² and a shoreline length of 15 km.

Contents

Map of Lake Ikeda, Ibusuki, Kagoshima Prefecture, Japan

Deterioration

The development of the areas surrounding Lake Ikeda has caused the quality of the water to decline since 1955. Other causes include an irrigation project, developed for agricultural field and households in the area, which was initiated in 1965, for it the courses of three nearby rivers were diverted into the lake. The irrigation system has been in operation since 1982, resulting in a considerable improvement of the water quality although since the 1950s the transparency of the lake, though still ranked No. 7 in the world, has decreased from 26.8 m to approximately 5m.

Animals

Lake Ikeda is known to harbour large eels, some six feet in length. In 1998, a benthological survey was conducted in the lake, which found that there were no zoobenthos, although two tubificid oligochaetes and a chironomid were found. The lake was already considered oligotrophic until the 1940s, but one theory for the further drop in underwater life is that the existing life in Lake Ikeda has been affected by Global Warming.

Mythology

Lake Ikeda is important in the local Shinto folklore of the surrounding regions. Local religious tradition originally held the lake as the origin of humankind.

References

Lake Ikeda Wikipedia


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