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What Lies Beneath Mirror Lake?

Famed UConn Landmark Sees Changes Over The Years

James White

Issue date: 10/30/07 Section: News
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Although Mirror Lake was once an impressive six-to-eight feet deep, the lake's depth has now dwindled to an average of just over two feet.
Media Credit: Matt Lin
Although Mirror Lake was once an impressive six-to-eight feet deep, the lake's depth has now dwindled to an average of just over two feet.

Mirror Lake, the somewhat optimistically named body of water across from Arjona and Monteith, has been a fixture of campus life practically since the university's inception.

Once used for ice skating and as host to an annual rope pull, today the lake serves as a reflecting pool for an elegant stand of birch and evergreen trees, and a scientific test-bed for students and faculty.

At times, however, the lake can be somewhat less picturesque - filled with muck, swarmed by geese or choked with algae.

"It's kind of dirty," said Jesse Dlugos, a 3rd-semester mechanical engineering student. "There's too many geese and everything."

Still, Dlugos says he thinks the lake is important to campus.

"I believe it breaks up the monotony of the rural environment," he said.

So what, then, does Mirror Lake mean to UConn? And what can be done to maintain it?

Donna Ellis, extension educator in the department of plant science, explained Mirror Lake has been invaluable to her research.

In 1996, Ellis began work on a project designed to combat purple loosestrife, a quick-spreading invasive species that grows in tall leafy stalks clustered with purple flowers.

At the time, Ellis said, "the lake was really flanked with loosestrife" - so her research team introduced galerucella beetles to help rein in the loosestrife population.

Today, Ellis reports the lake has moved from "monoculture to diversity," with such a wide variety of plant life that many professors use it to practice species identification with their classes.

"We're very pleased with the progress," Ellis said. "It's a good mix."

Another faculty member who's conducted research on Mirror Lake is Thomas Torgersen, a marine science professor at UConn's Groton campus.

Torgersen explained that the lake's low water level - it is, on average, just over two feet deep - is the result of sediment which is routed into the lake from the network of storm drains on campus, some as far away as the McMahon dorms.
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Steve MPA1993

posted 10/30/07 @ 10:33 AM EST

From what I remember, there's probably more than sediment in Mirror Lake. I suspect that the lake's bottom is full of garbage, including broken glass and old cans. (Continued…)

masopust

nlmasopust

posted 10/30/07 @ 6:17 PM EST

The lake is deeper than 2 feet. Three years ago, the Uconn Sailing Team sailed two Laser class sailboats on the lake. While some parts are only ankle deep, we were able to sail with the daggerboards completely down for the most part. (Continued…)

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