I own half of a pond (the property line runs through it) that some of my friends call a lake. I call it a pond. I have never known the difference. Here in Kansas I call Milford and Tuttle Creek lakes/resevoirs. But my pond is just that.
A google search tells me that all the water in a pond is in the photic zone, meaning ponds are shallow enough to allow sunlight to reach the bottom. But, what if the water is relatively clear? Does that change the definition?
LakeScientist.com has three key questions that might help you in figuring out what body of water you’re looking at:
If the answer to all three of these questions is a yes, the site claims that you have yourself a pond and not a lake.
So, when do you call a body of water a pond and when do you call it a lake?
A google search tells me that all the water in a pond is in the photic zone, meaning ponds are shallow enough to allow sunlight to reach the bottom. But, what if the water is relatively clear? Does that change the definition?
LakeScientist.com has three key questions that might help you in figuring out what body of water you’re looking at:
- Does light reach the bottom of the deepest point of the water body?
- Does the water body only get small waves (i.e., smaller than 1ft/30cm in height)?
- Is the water body relatively uniform in temperature?”
If the answer to all three of these questions is a yes, the site claims that you have yourself a pond and not a lake.
So, when do you call a body of water a pond and when do you call it a lake?
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