Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 19, 1953
The Crater Lake Community
By C. Warren Fairbanks, Assistant Park Naturalist
Probably the most asked question
concerning Crater Lake is "Are there any fish in the lake?" To answer
"yes" is easy. Such a reply, however, calls to mind the question of what
they use for food. This, in turn, leads to a discussion of conditions
which make it possible for fish to live and maintain themselves in
Crater Lake.
Crater Lake rests in an unusual setting
in comparison with most bodies of fresh water. It lies in the top of an
ancient mountain - - old as man reckons time, but geologically recent -
- the upper 5000 feet of which was destroyed about 6450 years ago. This
destruction was in nature of a collapse which dropped the top of the
mountain into a great void within its lower reaches and produced a
cauldron - - or "caldera," in the geologist's terminology - - nearly
4000 feet deep and from four to six miles in diameter.
Preceding the collapse, a brief series
of gigantic pumice eruptions withdrew great amounts of material from
below the mountaintop and contributed to formation of the mammoth
chamber. Some of these outpourings rushed down the slopes as flaming
avalanches of gas-charged lava, each pushed along by its own
jet-propelled impetus. Aside from filling stream and glacier-cut
valleys, they engulfed and destroyed the forests and all other life,
effectively sterilizing the area for miles around. Incidentally, the
engulfed forests, through the medium of radioactive carbon, give us our
best evidence as to the date of these last eruptions.
Since the collapse, precipitation has
filled the cavity to a depth of nearly 2000 feet with water of great
clarity and pureness. Its salt content is less than one-sixth that
permitted for drinking purposes. Its bacteria count, even in parts where
recent storms had carried large quantities of sediment into the lake,
was found to be exceedingly low. The shores and bottom are rocky and the
lake bed drops rapidly into deep water. There is no true shallow zone or
real emergent vegetation. This geologically young lake - - probably less
than a thousand years old at its present level - - has no beach worthy
of the name.
The unusual setting of Crater Lake in
the top of a mountain isolates it from the ordinary channels through
which living things migrate and extend their ranges. This old volcanic
cone slopes away on all sides. There is no higher ground from which
rivers flow into the lake and which could carry living organisms,
although there are numerous small cascades whose origins are in melting
snows higher within the walls. Neither are there known channeled
outlets, which could also serve as pathways of migration. Compared with
most lakes, which in reality are only widened streams, Crater Lake is
separated from the usual sources of plant and animal population. The
life which exists there had to come into the lake by extraordinary
means- - the hard way. There was no readily accessible reservoir.
It is interesting to conjecture just
how life did come to Crater Lake Briefly, many lower plants and animals
pass into stages of existence which are resistant to drying, freezing,
and other conditions inimical to normal active life. Frequently, such
inactive stages are associated with reproductive processes and involve
eggs or spores which can renew activity at some later time when
conditions are right. The shallow vernal pond which appears each spring,
blooms rapidly and abundantly with diverse plant and animal life, and
completely dries up later each summer is an example of this phenomenon.
Since many of the forms found in Crater Lake have such inactive stages,
it is easy to understand how they came to be there. Bits of mud clinging
to the feet of bird could have brought many of them. Some could even
have been carried by wind. Others could have been introduced with
planted fish.
The Crater Lake community is complex.
While the number of forms is small compared with many lakes, among the
animals are representatives of most groups found in other fresh waters.
In considering the community, however, the green plant is the key to its
existence. As is true elsewhere, the green plant with its almost magic
chlorophyll supplies all the energy used by animals. It alone has the
unique ability to trap energy from the sun and make it available to
other living things. It does this by combining two simple substances,
carbon dioxide and water, to form grape sugar which is rich in tied-up
energy.
This energy is passed on in one form or
another to animals and some other plants. The fish - - or man, who eats
the fish - - thus derives its very existence, perhaps through a long
line of progressively smaller animals, from the simple green plant which
started the processes. The biologist calls this a food chain, with the
green plant at one end and the large animal at the other. This is the
sort of relationship which makes it possible for fish to live in Crater
Lake.
Of the green plants in the lake the
most important, and practically the only ones, are the algae. These
simple, essentially one-celled plants exist singly or in small groups
that ordinarily can be seen only with the aid of a microscope. Some are
grouped into long thread-like filaments. The filaments in turn may be
gathered into jelly-like balls or masses large enough to be seen with
the naked eye.
It would be difficult to assign
relative importance to the members of this large plant group. Surely
those classed as blue-greens, having a blue pigment which partially
masks the green of the chlorophyll, appear most abundantly. One of
these, Nostoc, is found growing in ball-like masses attached to
rocks and among mosses. Other blue-greens are Oscillatoria,
Calothrix, and Chroococcus
(Brode, 1938). Other important algae, however, are certain filamentous
greens, for example, Mougeotia and Zygnema. Rocks and logs
along the shore show a conspicuous growth of Cladophora (Brode,
1938) and Ulothrix. Diatoms comprise the third important algal
group. They are so abundant in "Fumarole Bay," on the western side of
Wizard Island, that the glass cases which enclose the living portion of
this one-celled plant have formed, as countless numbers have died and
settled to the bottom, a thick floor of diatomaceous ooze. This, of
course, does not exhaust the algae found in Crater Lake but is only
representative.
Mosses also are represented in the
waters of the lake. Near Wizard Island, Fontinalis and
Drepanocladus form a very thick mat on the bottom at a depth of 394
feet (Hasler, 1938) - - an indication of the great clarity of the water,
which permits light to penetrate to such a depth in sufficient quantity
for these plants to carry on the essential process of food manufacture.
Fontinalis also occurs on the
"Old Man of the Lake," the only place it is found near the surface
(Brode, 1938). During the summer of 1953, a collection of several moss
specimens was made on the "Old Man of the Lake." Recent examination of
these specimens by Dr. Henry S. Conard, Grinnell College, Iowa, showed
all the material to be Scleropodium obtusifolium (Hook.) Kindb.
It would appear, therefore, that this specie. is now the most abundant,
if not the only, moss in this unusual habitat. Appreciation is expressed
to Dr. Conard for making this identification.
According to Brode (1938), the only
flowering plant growing rooted in the lake is the water buttercup (Ranunculus
aquatilis capillaceus), found at depths of five to fifteen feet.
These, then, are the green plants which
form the base of the great pyramid at the apex of which are the fish
which dominate the waters.
Green plants alone, however, would not
support a population of rainbow trout or sockeye salmon. These animals
require a "meat" diet. Between them and the plants there is of necessity
at least one intermediate animal which feeds upon plants and serves to
convert plant materials into animal substance. Several inhabitants of
Crater Lake serve in this capacity. Some feed directly upon the living
plants while others function as scavengers which utilize dead organic
matter for food. Hubbard (1934) lists five such converters. The most
important is the "bloodworm, " or midge larva, which feeds almost
exclusively upon algae. While some larvae are taken by fish, the pupal
stage, since it is less active, appears to be a more important component
of the fish diet. Caddis fly pupae are also found in some abundance in
fish stomachs.
Snails, which feed on diatoms as well
as upon dead animal matter are often taken by fish. Chief Ranger L. W.
Hallock reported the catch of a 23-inch rainbow, the major food item of
which was the snail. This returning of dead animal matter directly to
living flesh is an important short cut in the food cycle.
Certain small relatives of the crayfish
which live in the lake also play their part in food conversion.
Daphnia, the so-called "water flea," is very tiny--it measures
perhaps 2mm., 1/12 inch, in length--but exists in rather large numbers.
Kemmerer et al. (1923) state that they are found mostly between about
250 and 300 feet or more below the surface. The preferred food item of
these small crustaceans is the diatom. They, in turn, are of primary
importance to the fingerling fish and often make up a considerable
portion of the food of larger fish. Brode (1938) reported 7500 in the
stomach of one fish. The freshwater shrimp, Hyalella, also forms
part of their diet. The copepod,
Cyclops, though not as abundant as Daphnia, plays a similar
role as a converter.
Many of the smaller converters are also
fed upon by large carnivorous water insects, which then fall prey to
fish. Of these intermediate forms, dragonfly nymphs play an important
part. While they themselves are seldom taken by fish, adults, as they
fly over the water, often are caught by them. Adult whirligig beetles,
which live in the water, also are important intermediates.
During the summer months, those fish
which feed at the surface take advantage of any food items that may come
their way. While no considerable number of fish stomachs were examined
this season, those studied-- from fish taken exclusively by casting from
shore--had fed predominantly upon terrestrial insects. These consisted
of various flies, bees, ichneumons, a great many long- horned beetles,
butterflies and dragonflies. A few spiders were also found. Strictly
aquatic forms were few and were primarily midge larvae and pupae.
Most of the fish reported were taken by
Ranger Joseph C. Hunt. These were largely rainbow trout (Salmo
gairdnerii irideus), although a few were sockeye salmon (Oncorhyncus
nerka kennerlyi). The former ranged in length from about 12 to 22
inches, while the sockeyes had a maximum of about 12 inches. The fish,
therefore, is an opportunist and takes advantage of what may come his
way. In this manner he is able to encroach upon food supplies from
outside the lake.
Other forms of animal life not of great
importance as fish food are also found in Crater Lake. The endemic
salamander, the Mazama newt (Triturus granulosus mazamae),
occasionally furnishes a meal for a fish. This near relative of the
frog, in company with the long-toed salamander (Ambystoma
macrodactylum), lives under rocks along the shore.
Water-dwelling annelids, related to the
common earthworm, are found in small numbers and sometimes are retrieved
from fish stomachs. In a rather cursory examination of the aquatic
community on the "Old Man of the Lake," the remains of a hemlock tree
with part of its root system below, and about five feet of stump
extending vertically above, the water surface and which is carried about
the lake by wind currents, there were found two kinds of these annelids.
Among other interesting forms in this community were a large number of
mites--relatives of the spider. Quite abundant also, were copepods
belonging to the harpacticid group. Specific identification has not yet
been made. The available literature indicates, however, that this group
of microcrustaceans has not been previously reported from Crater Lake.
Fish, as previously stated, are the
dominant forms of animal life in the lake. It should be evident that
these inhabitants did not enter the lake by natural means. The first
planting was made September 1, 1888, by William Gladstone Steel when he
released 37 of an estimated 600 rainbow trout "minnows" with which he
had started from the Gordon Ranch, 41 miles from the lake. The first
trout was caught in 1901. In 1902, and in many years thereafter, other
plantings were made by the National Park Service. A number of species
were tried but, with plantings discontinued in the early 1940's, the
only ones that have persisted and reproduced are the rainbow trout and
sockeye salmon.
The Crater Lake community is thus seen,
from this brief review, to be a relatively closed community, at present
essentially self-sustaining.
Some forms have been introduced
artificially. Most of the inhabitants, however, have found their own
ways there and have become established as important components which
make their own peculiar contributions toward the total economy.
References
Brode, J. Stanley. 1938. The denizens
of Crater Lake. Northwest Sci. 12 (3):50-57.
Hasler, Arthur D. 1938. Fish biology
and limnology of Crater Lake, Oregon. Jour. Wildlife Management
2(3):94-103.
Hubbard, C. Andresen. 1934. Fact and
fancy about Crater Lake fish. Report submitted to the Research Branch of
the National Park Service, March 1, 1934. (MS. in Crater Lake National
Park Library).
Kemmerer, George, J.F. Bovard and W. T.
Boorman. 1923. Northeastern lakes of the United States: biological and
chemical studies with reference to possibilities in production of fish.
Bull. Bur Fisheries
39:51-140.

Crater Lake Bears. From kodachrome by Welles and Welles.