How It Works

Australia’s pink lake

Meet the salt-loving cells responsibl­e for painting Lake Hillier its lurid colour

- Words by Ailsa Harvey

On an island off the coast of Western Australia, you might expect the abundant sunshine to highlight a feast of colour for your eyes. However, the turquoise of the shallow waves and sunkissed greens in the trees of Middle Island are interrupte­d by a contrastin­g body of intense pink. Though an irregular shade to grace any of Earth’s natural landscapes, this is no trick of the eye. This is Lake Hillier, an entirely pink lake.

After its discovery in 1802 by a Royal Navy explorer, it was soon realised that this lake was as rich in salt as it was colour. The lake has a salt concentrat­ion around ten-times higher than the ocean that surrounds the island. This made it a prime target for salt miners, who extracted the mineral from it for years. Today, however, the natural wonder is protected, and the lake serves mainly as a tourist attraction. Onlookers gaze in awe at the delightful­ly pink tones, bordered by its dry-salt shore, with many asking how it is possible for a lake to be so pink.

As much as the lake resembles a humanmade pool of strawberry milkshake, the answer to this question comes only from nature. Lake Hillier is thought to gain its colour mainly from a microorgan­ism called Dunaliella salina. This algae has adapted to thrive in the lake’s extremely salty conditions using a pink pigment to survive the high salt concentrat­ions that are toxic to other organisms.

 ??  ?? Being on an island and surrounded by dense forest makes the lake difficult to reach
Being on an island and surrounded by dense forest makes the lake difficult to reach
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