Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 1, No. 2, August 1928
Food for Fish
By Earl U. Homuth
The question of proper and sufficient
food for the fish in Crater Lake's almost chemically pure waters is
often discussed. Since the only drainage into the lake is the small
precipitation which falls on the cliffs from the Rim to the shore, any
food carried into the lake from that source would be negligible. That
food in sufficient abundance does exist is evidenced by the fact that
the fish caught are always in excellent condition.
In the few shallows along the base of
the talus under Glacier Peak and The Watchman, thousands of tadpoles
were recently again observed, and frogs of at least two species, and
this is at least one source of abundant food supply.