Lake Winnipeg (French: Lac Winnipeg) is a very large, relatively shallow 24,514-square-kilometre (9,465 sq mi) lake in North America, in the province of Manitoba, Canada. Its southern end is about 55 kilometres (34 mi) north of the city of Winnipeg. Lake Winnipeg is Canada's sixth-largest freshwater lake[3] and the third-largest freshwater lake contained entirely within Canada, but it is relatively shallow (mean depth of 12 m [39 ft])[4] excluding a narrow 36 m (118 ft) deep channel between the northern and southern basins. It is the eleventh-largest freshwater lake on Earth. The lake's east side has pristine boreal forests and rivers that were in 2018 inscribed as Pimachiowin Aki, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The lake is 416 km (258 mi) from north to south, with remote sandy beaches, large limestone cliffs, and many bat caves in some areas. Manitoba Hydro uses the lake as one of the largest reservoirs in the world. There are many islands, most of them undeveloped.
Other tributaries of Lake Winnipeg (clockwise from the south end) include Meleb Drain (drainage canal), Drunken River, Icelandic River, Washow Bay Creek, Sugar Creek, Beaver Creek, Mill Creek, Moose Creek, Fisher River, Jackhead River, Kinwow Bay Creek, Jackpine Creek, Mantagao River, Solomons Creek, Jumping Creek, Warpath River, South Two Rivers, North Two Rivers, South Twin Creek, North Twin Creek, Saskachaywiak Creek, Eating Point Creek, Woody Point Creeks, Muskwa Creek, Buffalo Creek, Fiddler Creek, Sturgeon Creek, Hungry River, Cypress Creek, William River, Bélanger River, Mukutawa River, Crane Creek, Kapawekapuk Creek, Marchand Creek, Leaf River, Pigeon River, Taskapekawe Creek, Bradbury River, Petopeko Creek, Loon Creek, Sanders Creek, Rice River, Wanipigow River, Barrie Creek, Mutch Creek, Sandy River, Black River, Sandy Creek, Catfish Creek, Jackfish Creek, Marais Creek, Brokenhead River and Devils Creek.[7][8]
Geology
Lake Winnipeg and Lake Manitoba are remnants of prehistoric Glacial Lake Agassiz, although there is evidence of a desiccated south basin of Lake Winnipeg approximately 4,000 years ago. The area between the lakes is called the Interlake Region, and the whole region is called the Manitoba Lowlands.[citation needed]
Rainbow trout and brown trout are stocked in Manitoba waters by provincial fisheries as part of a put and take program to support angling opportunities. Neither species is able to sustain itself independently in Manitoba.[12]Smallmouth bass was first recorded from the lake in 2002, indicating populations introduced elsewhere in the watershed are now present in the lake.[13]White bass were first recorded from the lake in 1963, ten years after being introduced into Lake Ashtabula in North Dakota.[14]Common carp were introduced to the lake through the Red River of the North and are firmly established.[15]
Birds
Lake Winnipeg provides feeding and nesting sites for a wide variety of birds associated with water during the summer months.
Isolated, uninhabited islands provide nesting sites for colonial nesting birds including pelicans, gulls and terns. Large marshes, shores and shallows allow these birds to successfully feed themselves and their young. Pipestone Rocks are considered a globally significant site for American white pelicans. In 1998, an estimated 3.7% of the world's population of this bird at the time were counted nesting on the rocky outcrops.[16] The same site is significant within North America for the numbers of colonial waterbirds using the area, especially common terns.[16] Other globally significant nesting areas are found at Gull Island and Sandhill Island,[17]Little George Island[18] and Louis Island.[19] Birds nesting at these sites include common and Caspian terns, herring gulls, ring-billed gulls, double-crested cormorants and greater scaups.
Lake Winnipeg has two sites considered globally important in the fall migration. Large populations of waterfowl and shorebirds use the sand bars east of Riverton as a staging area for fall migration.[20] The Netley-Libau Marsh, where the Red River enters Lake Winnipeg, is used by geese, ducks and swallows to gather for the southward migration.[21]
Piping plovers, an endangered species of shorebird, are found in several locations around the lake. The Gull Bay Spits, south of the town of Grand Rapids, are considered nationally significant nesting sites for this species.[22]
Lake Winnipeg is suffering from many environmental issues such as an explosion in the population of cyanobacteria, caused by excessive amounts of phosphorus seeping into the lake.[23][24] The phosphorus levels are approaching a point that could be dangerous for human health.[25]
The Global Nature Fund declared Lake Winnipeg as the "threatened lake of the year" in 2013.[26]
In 2015, there was a major uptick of zebra mussels in Lake Winnipeg, the reduction of which is next to impossible because of a lack of natural predators in the lake. The mussels are devastating to the ecological opportunities of the lake.[27]
History
It is believed Henry Kelsey was the first European to see the lake, in 1690. He adopted the Cree language name for the lake: wīnipēk (ᐐᓂᐯᐠ), meaning "muddy waters". La Vérendrye referred to the lake as Ouinipigon when he built the first forts in the area in the 1730s. Later, the Red River Colony to its south took the lake's name for Winnipeg, the capital of Manitoba.[citation needed]
Because of its length, the Lake Winnipeg water system and the lake was an important transportation route in the province before the railways reached Manitoba. It continued to be a major transportation route even after the railways reached the province. In addition to aboriginal canoes and York boats, several steamboats plied the lake, including Anson Northup, City of Selkirk, Colvile, Keenora, Premier, Princess, Winnitoba, Wolverine and most recently the diesel-powered MS Lord Selkirk II passenger cruise ship.[citation needed]
Lake Winnipeg is widely recognized as a premier angling destination, attracting anglers from around the globe[30] "targeting it's abundant walleye, sauger and channel catfish populations"[31] along with northern pike, yellow perch, gold eye, mooneye. Angling efforts vary from casting lines from shore, trolling its depths or dropping a line through the ice in search of a Master Angler Walleye, considered to be a Walleye caught in Manitoba by hook and line measuring over 71cm (28").[32]
As of 2010 "over 50,000 anglers fished more than 389,000 days on the Red River and Lake Winnipeg combined" and "contribute an estimated $20,000,000 to $32,000,000 annually.[33] and as of 2018 that had grown to nearly 100,000 adult anglers fishing Lake Winnipeg and its southern tributaries, adding $102,000,000 to the provincial GDP supporting some 1,500 jobs.[34]
Many licensed outfitters offer a wide array of services from guided fishing trips to equipment rentals and accommodations in service of recreational anglers.[35]
Recent introduction of new angling regulations aim to ensure the sustainability of the fishery, with an extended season closure during the spring walleye spawn, reduced possession limits, and an end to the retention of trophy sized fish.[36][37]
Commercial fisheries
Lake Winnipeg has important commercial fisheries. It contributes 57% of the province's total production and 75% of the landed value of the harvest in Manitoba. Average annual landings from Lake Winnipeg from 2009 to 2015 were 6,539,739 kg, with an average value of $15,357,975.[33] The lake was once the main source of goldeye in Canada, which is why the fish is sometimes called Winnipeg goldeye. Walleye and whitefish together account for over 90 percent of its commercial fishing.[38]
^ abStewart, Kenneth W.; Watkinson, Douglas A. (2004). The freshwater fishes of Manitoba. Manitoba: Univ. of Manitoba Press, CN. pp. 10–11. ISBN0-88755-678-7.
^ abStewart, Kenneth W.; Watkinson, Douglas A. (2004). The freshwater fishes of Manitoba. Manitoba: Univ. of Manitoba Press, CN. pp. 249–257. ISBN0-88755-678-7.
^Stewart, Kenneth W.; Watkinson, Douglas A. (2004). The freshwater fishes of Manitoba. Manitoba: Univ. of Manitoba Press, CN. pp. 169–174. ISBN0-88755-678-7.
^Stewart, Kenneth W.; Watkinson, Douglas A. (2004). The freshwater fishes of Manitoba. Manitoba: Univ. of Manitoba Press, CN. pp. 221–222. ISBN0-88755-678-7.
^Stewart, Kenneth W.; Watkinson, Douglas A. (2004). The freshwater fishes of Manitoba. Manitoba: Univ. of Manitoba Press, CN. pp. 208–209. ISBN0-88755-678-7.
^Stewart, Kenneth W.; Watkinson, Douglas A. (2004). The freshwater fishes of Manitoba. Manitoba: Univ. of Manitoba Press, CN. p. 22. ISBN0-88755-678-7.
^ ab"Pipestone Rocks". Important Bird Areas Canada. Bird Studies Canada and Nature Canada. Retrieved 24 September 2017.
^"Gull and Sandhill Island". Important Bird Areas Canada. Bird Studies Canada and Nature Canada. Retrieved 24 September 2017.
^"Little George Island". Important Bird Areas Canada. Bird Studies Canada and Nature Canada. Retrieved 24 September 2017.
^Fur Trade Canoe Routes of Canada/ Then and Now by Eric W. Morse Canada National and Historic Parks Branch, first printing 1969.
^"Indigenous Place Names". Language selection - Natural Resources Canada / Sélection de la langue - Ressources naturelles Canada. 9 June 2017. Retrieved 22 November 2022.
^Franzin, W G; Stewart, K W; Heuring, L; Hanke, G (1996). The fish and fisheries of Lake Winnipeg (Report). Natural Resources Canada/CMSS/Information Management. doi:10.4095/207523.
Daily Commercial News and Construction Record, "Ottawa asked to help block water diversion project: Devils Lake outlet recommended by U.S. Army Corps of Engineers" (20 October 2003), Vol. 76, Issue 198,. p. 3
Sexton, B. (2006) "Wastes control: Manitoba demands more scrutiny of North Dakota's water diversion scheme", Outdoor Canada, Vol. 34, Issue 1, p. 32