Not surprisingly, the answer to that question is: It depends. If you want a clear swimming hole, or trophy bass lake, the optimum water clarity will be different.
The clarity or visibility of your pond affects many aspects of your pond's specific ecosystem. Primary productivity, vegetation growth and abundance, fish condition, and dissolved oxygen concentration are all influenced by water clarity. Water clarity is affected by a large number of factors including: suspended solids (t.s.s), turbidity (number of individual particles), and density of microorganisms (phytoplankton). By managing these factors, you can manipulate the clarity of your pond to best suit your goals for the pond.
The ideal clarity for you and your pond is dependent on your intended use for the pond. If you want a clear swimming hole, or trophy bass lake, the recommended water clarity will be different. Too clear and too dirty/muddy can both lead to decreased relative weights of fish, so for the successful fishery it is best to be somewhere in the middle.
Bass are less effective open water predators and are required to expend greater amounts of energy to chase their forage, in turn decreasing their growth rates. When presented with environments within 18-24 inches of visibility bass are able to utilize sight and vibrations through their lateral line all while still effectively maintaining an ambush feeding strategy. This allows for greater net nutrient gain as less energy is needed to be expended on each meal.
In order to decrease clarity to reduce light penetration we often suggest fertilizing your pond in spring. Fertilizing your pond has numerous beneficial effects and is highly suggested when your pond is greater than 2 acres. Aquatic fertilizer consists of a mixture of Nitrogen, Phosphorus, and Potassium. When dispersed in aquatic ecosystems, these inorganic nutrients facilitate primary production and feed the ecosystem from the bottom up. Primary production is the process of converting inorganic nutrients and sunlight into organic compounds. This is important in your pond because it is the basis for the entire food chain in your aquatic ecosystem. Phytoplankton fixate these inorganic compounds into organic energy within their body that gets released into the next organism in the food chain upon predation. In short, fertilizer “feeds” the smallest organisms in the food chain so it can better feed the larger organisms hence “bottom-up” fertilization.
Following fertilization, increased abundance of nutrients facilitates a bloom of photosynthetic organisms called phytoplankton. This bloom creates a green tint to the water and decreases visibility. This results in decreased light penetration limiting the area of substrate submergent vegetation can grow, increased usage of available nutrients while decreasing amounts of nutrients available for vegetation, and increasing production potential within the fish community.
Oftentimes very low visibility in ponds is due to the amount of suspended solids in the water column. Muddy water is very common with new ponds and should be allowed ample time for the sediments and other solids to settle. A rule of thumb would be to wait a month after your surrounding ground has grown back some grass and other vegetation to control soil erosion. After that month if your pond still has not settled out, a gypsum treatment may be necessary to increase clarity. Gypsum binds with suspended clay particles and sinks them to the bottom and out of the water column thus increasing clarity. Soil erosion from heavy rains will often muddy up ponds for a few days or a week, but often settle out again in time. This is natural and is actually beneficial for the ecosystem as new nutrients get washed into the water with the runoff. Another contributor to a muddy pond may be a fountain that has been placed either in a shallow pond or in a shallow portion of the pond. Often times the pumps on these fountains can create an updraft of water that extends down to the bottom and disperses substrate sediment throughout the water column. To test if this is the case in your pond turn off or unplug your fountain for a week or so and evaluate if you see an increase in visibility. If so, you may need to reposition your fountain into deeper water.
Hopefully, this helps you understand pond clarity and issues associated with it. If you have any more questions, feel free to call or email us and we will get back with you as soon as we can to answer any further questions. Or, check out the Pond King DIY Pond Management iPhone App.
See y'all down at the pond.