Hindustan Times (Noida)

Why lakes change colour

- Dipanjan Sinha letters@hindustant­imes.com

In July, the Lonar Lake in Maharashtr­a turned bright pink. Some gawked at the marvellous overnight makeover, others were concerned that it might have been caused by a dangerous pollutant. For locals however, life at the edge of an oval-shaped lake that formed after a meteorite hit the earth some 50,000 years ago got a lot more interestin­g. “For months, people who wanted to visit kept asking ‘Is this true?’ ‘Did someone colour the water?’” says Sailesh Sadar, a local tourist guide. For Zahir Sheikh, who works on projects for the forest department, the rise in tourist interest during the pandemic was also a concern.

But Lonar Lake’s water turned back to its green colour in around two weeks. And it turns out, there is not much to worry about. Water bodies tend to change colour when an already saline lake sees an increase in salinity even when nothing but some algae and bacteria grows, says Prashant Dhakephalk­ar, microbiolo­gist and director of the Pune-based Agharkar Research Institute.

Dhakephalk­ar was part of the team that submitted a report to the government about this phenomenon at Lonar. He says the pink was caused by a combinatio­n of factors, and precipitat­ed by the lockdown. The lake’s rocks are basaltic, which makes the water highly saline. This salinity gets diluted with the rains. But with high temperatur­es and fewer visitors in 2020, there was greater evaporatio­n, increasing the salinity of the water by around 6%. “It caused a growth of halophilic microorgan­isms or salt-loving bacteria. Some of these bacteria produce a pink pigment which colour the lake,” he says. The colour is restored when the salinity goes down again.

Social media reports show that it happens everywhere. In the UAE’S Ras Al Khaimah emirate, a pink lake was discovered just last month, with high salinity the cause once again. Experts there say that excess salt turns some lakes pink every year in that area. The ones that have stayed pink for a long time, such as Lake Hillier in West Australia and the Great Salt Lake in Utah, have become popular tourist destinatio­ns. When the lake at Hutt Lagoon in Australia turned pink in 2014, it even became a sort of status symbol. Wealthy Chinese tourists flocked to the region to show off.

But tourists might not always get the shade of pink they seek. Even at their most intense, pink lakes are rarely as opaque as the pictures make them seem.

Faiyaz Khudsar, wildlife biologist and scientist-in-charge at the Yamuna Biodiversi­ty Park, has been working on ecological diversity and its restoratio­n around water bodies. He says there might be an economic upside to this phenomenon. “The colour comes from the carotenoid­s in the algae and bacteria,” he says. “These carotenoid­s can be used to make anti-oxidants for dietary supplement­s and even cosmetics.”

For the moment, we can neither predict a colour change not hold on to the hue. And in a time when we’ve struggled stay in control of the world around, the mystery posed by a colour changing lake is perhaps the best way to celebrate serendipit­y.

 ?? PRATIK CHORGE/HT PHOTO ?? Lonar Lake in Maharashtr­a turned pink last year. Many feared it was due to a pollutant, but scientists say it’s a common temporary condition caused by salinity and bacteria.
PRATIK CHORGE/HT PHOTO Lonar Lake in Maharashtr­a turned pink last year. Many feared it was due to a pollutant, but scientists say it’s a common temporary condition caused by salinity and bacteria.

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