The Great Lakes Watershed Is
A Region Of High Biodiversity
And Lake Ontario
Is Important
For Its Diversity Of Birds
Fish
Reptiles
Amphibians
And Plants
Many Of These Special Species
Are Associated With Shorelines
Particularly Sand Dunes
Lagoons
And Wetlands
The Importance Of Wetlands
To
The Lake Has Been Appreciated
And Many Of
The Larger Wetlands Have Protected Status
However
These Wetlands
Are Changing
In Part Because
The Natural Water Level Fluctuations Have Been Reduced
Many Wetland Plants
Are Dependent Upon Low Water Levels
To Reproduce. When Water Levels
Are Stabilized
The Area
And Diversity Of
The Marsh
Is Reduced
This
Is Particularly True Of Meadow Marsh (also Known
As Wet Meadow Wetlands);
For Example
In Eel Bay Near Alexandria Bay
Regulation Of Lake Levels Has Resulted
In Large Losses Of Wet Meadow. Often This
Is Accompanied By
The Invasion Of Cattails
Which Displace Many Of
The Native Plant Species
And Reduce Plant Diversity
Eutrophication May Accelerate This Process
By Providing Nitrogen
And Phosphorus For
The More Rapid Growth Of Competitively Dominant Plants. Similar Effects
Are Occurring
On
The North Shore
In Wetlands Such
As Presqu'ile
Which Have Interdunal Wetlands Called Pannes
With High Plant Diversity
And Many Unusual Plant Species
Most Of
The Forests Around
The Lake
Are Deciduous Forests Dominated
By Trees Including Maple
Oak
Beech
Ash
And Basswood
These
Are Classified
As Part Of
The Mixedwood Plains Ecozone
By Environment Canada
Or As
The Eastern Great Lakes
And Hudson Lowlands By
The United States Environmental Protection Agency
Or As
The Great Lakes Ecoregion By
The Nature Conservancy. Deforestation
In
The Vicinity Of
The Lake Has Had Many Negative Impacts, Including Loss Of Forest Birds
Extinction Of Native Salmon
And Increased Amounts Of Sediment Flowing Into
The Lake
In Some Areas More Than 90 Percent Of
The Forest Cover Has Been Removed
And Replaced
By Agriculture
Certain Tree Species
Such
As Hemlock
Have Also Been Particularly Depleted
By Past Logging Activity. Guidelines
For Restoration Stress
The Importance Of Maintaining
And Restoring Forest Cover
Particularly Along Streams
And Wetlands
The Open Water
Is Less-affected
By Shoreline Features
Such
As Wetlands
And More Affected
By Nutrient Levels That Control
The Production Of Algae
Algae
Are
The Basis Of
The Open Water Food Web
And
The Source Of Primary Production That Ends Up
As Lake Trout
And Walleye At
The Top Of
The Open Water Food Web
Lake Sturgeon Were Abundant
In 1860
And Had Been Driven
To Near Extinction
By 1960
Like
The Other Great Lakes
Lake Ontario Used
To Have An Important Commercial Fishery
It Has Been Largely Destroyed
Mostly
By Over-fishing
Consider
The Lake Sturgeon
As But One Example
Lake Sturgeon
Are Huge Fish�they Can Grow Up
To Three Meters Long
And Exceed 190 Kg
In Weight
The Females Mature Slowly
And Require Decades
To Reach Sexual Maturity
It Was Once An Abundant Species
In Lake Ontario
"In 1860
This Species
Taken
On Incidental Catches Of Other Fishes
Was Killed
And Dumped Back
In
The Lake
Piled Up
On Shore
To Dry
And Be Burned
Fed
To Pigs
Or Dug Into
The Earth
As Fertilizer."
It Was Even Stacked Like Cordwood
And Used
To Fuel Steamboats
Once Its Value Was Realized
"They Were Taken
By Every Available Means From Spearing
And Jigging
To Set Lines Of Baited Or Unbaited Hooks Laid
On
The Bottom
To Trapnets
Poundnets
And Gillnets." Over 5 Million Pounds Were Taken From Adjoining Lake Erie In
A Single Year
The Fishery Collapsed
Largely
By 1900
They Have Never Recovered
Like Most Sturgeons
The Lake Sturgeon
Is Rare Now
And
Is Protected
In Many Areas
Populations
In
The Oswego River
Are Being Actively Managed
For Recovery
Lake Ontario Food Web
Main article: Culture
in Toronto
2004
John J
Lynch High School (North York
1963 - Congregation of Christian Brothers
and Daughters of Wisdom). . . 13 See also
Main article: Roads
in Ontario, 2.2 Parliament
The four Atlantic Provinces
are Canada's least populated
with New Brunswick
the third least populous
at 747,101
in 2016
the Atlantic provinces also have higher rural populations
New Brunswick was largely rural until 1951; since then
the rural-urban split has been roughly even. Population density
in
the Maritimes
is above average among Canadian provinces
which reflects their small size and
the fact that they do not possess large
unpopulated hinterlands
as do
the other seven provinces
and three territories
New Brunswick's 107 municipalities cover 8.6% of
the province's land mass but
are home
to 65.3% of its population
the three major urban areas
are
in
the south of
the province and
are Greater Moncton
population 126,424
Greater Saint John
population 122,389
and Greater Fredericton
population 85,688
Ethnicity
and language.
. . . ! The Union Pearson Express (UP Express)
is an airport rail link service
it runs between Canada's two busiest transportation hubs: Union Station
in Downtown Toronto
and Toronto Pearson International Airport along GO Transit's Kitchener line
it also stops
at Weston
and Bloor GO Transit stations
A TTC ALRV streetcar at
the east end of
the 501 Queen streetcar route, 3 Specialty
Progressive Conservatives Seats: 0 - - - - -. ! . .
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