@article{KG Seanego_GC Pitcher_TA Probyn_A Du Randt_LM Mansfield_2023, title={Water quality characteristics of Vanderkloof Dam and its potential for rainbow trout farming}, volume={49}, url={https://watersa.net/article/view/16032}, DOI={10.17159/wsa/2023.v49.i2.3919}, abstractNote={<p>Vanderkloof Dam was periodically sampled between November 2014 and April 2016 for a range of water quality parameters to assess the potential for cage culture of rainbow trout, <em>Oncorhyncus mykiss</em>.  The dam is strongly stratified in summer and autumn, although upper water column temperatures remain relatively cool, largely <25°C. The dam is considered oligotrophic, characterised by phosphorus limitation of primary production, particularly during summer. Light is strongly attenuated in the epilimnion and heterotrophic community metabolism is observed through much of the water column. Surface nutrients are depleted through the summer with phytoplankton assemblages dominated by the green algae, <em>Oocystis lacustris</em>,<em> Desmodesmus bicaudatus</em> and<em> Coelastrum microporum</em>. The water column turns over during the winter and the nearly isothermal impoundment approaches 11°C. Nutrients are re-introduced into surface waters following winter mixing coincident with an increase in diatoms. The preferred environmental window for rainbow trout becomes severely contracted during the summer in that epilimnion temperatures exceed 21°C and thermocline/hypolimnion oxygen concentrations fall below 3 mg‧L<sup>−1</sup>. The coincidence of relatively high pH >9.5 could exacerbate these physiological challenges. Hydrological conditions for fish farming are most suitable in the proximity of the dam wall as opposed to further upstream. Here the hypoxic conditions that develop in the thermocline/hypolimnion during summer and autumn are less pronounced, particularly towards the southern bank, where concentrations of total suspended solids are generally <10 mg‧L<sup>−1</sup> and water clarity is more favourable for visual feeders such as fish. Although rainbow trout may survive the adverse conditions prevalent during the summer, growth is likely to be compromised and susceptibility to disease may increase.</p>}, number={2 April}, journal={Water SA}, author={KG Seanego and GC Pitcher and TA Probyn and A Du Randt and LM Mansfield}, year={2023}, month={Apr.} }