Chungará Lake


Chungará is a lake situated in the extreme north of Chile at an elevation of, in the Altiplano of Arica y Parinacota Region in the Lauca National Park. It has a surface area of about and has a maximum depth of about. It receives inflow through the Río Chungara with some minor additional inflows, and loses most of its water to evaporation; seepage into the Laguna Quta Qutani plays a minor role.
The lake formed between 17,000 and 8,000 years ago when the volcano Parinacota collapsed and the debris from the collapse dammed the Lauca River. Since then the lake has progressively grown owing to decreasing seepage. The lake is part of the Lauca National Park; a planned diversion of the lake's waters into the Azapa Valley being abandoned after a decision by the Chilean Supreme Court.

Name

The name Chungará or Chungara is derived from the Aymara language and has several different meanings: Chunka, a type of bush or moss plus the suffix ra that signifies "covered by"; but this meaning appears to have fallen into disuse. A second meaning is Chunkha "beard" which together with the suffix means "bearded" and refers to a myth of a bearded man that came to the area and destroyed a community with fire.

Geography

Chungará Lake is located the northernmost part of Chile and close to the border with Bolivia. It lies at an elevation of in the Chilean Altiplano; it is one of the highest lakes in the world and the second highest-largest after Lake Titicaca in the Altiplano. The lake is part of the Lauca National Park, a nationally and internationally designated protected area, and a CONAF refuge lies close to the western shores of the lake. There is also a marina and a pumping plant in the northwestern area of Chungará Lake. Chile Route 11 passes by the southern and western shores of Chungará Lake.
The lake is about wide and covers an irregular surface of about -, with two large embayments in the northeastern and the southern sectors of the lake and a narrower one in its northwestern corner. Its deepest point is - deep and lies in the northwestern sector of the lake. The northern and western side of the lake have steep shores, while the southern and eastern ones are much more gentle; the eastern shore is covered by a large alluvial fan and the southern one by sediments deposited by the Río Chungara tributary. The lakefloor features platforms, flat areas and sloping areas. northwest from Chungará Lake lies the Lagunas Cotacotani.
The volcanoes Parinacota of Pliocene to Holocene age and Ajoya of Miocene age lie north and west of the lake, respectively; the northern shore of the lake is formed by lava flows from Parinacota volcano. While Parinacota is well preserved, Ajoya and Quisiquisini on the eastern shore of the lake are moderately eroded. Farther south from Chungará Lake lies the high Guallatiri.

Hydrology

The water temperature reaches its maximum during March with and a minimum in January with according to one study, while temperatures on the lakefloor range between. Water levels vary by between seasons and fluctuations of have been recorded.
The present-day water levels are the highest in the history of the lake and there is no evidence of former lake highstands,
and the depth of the lake has generally increased during the course of its history. There are some long term fluctuations in water levels, including a deepening episode during the latest Pleistocene and three or four episodes of water level lowstand during the middle and late Holocene at about 10,500, 9,800, 7,800 and 6,700 calibrated radiocarbon years ago. Since about 5,000 calibrated radiocarbon years ago lake levels have been high.
The Lake Chungará is part of a large high-elevation watershed in the Altiplano, bordered on the west by the Lauca River watershed and on the east by the Bolivian frontier; the watershed is surrounded by snow-covered volcanoes. The largest tributary of the lake is the Río Chungara with a discharge of about which originates on Guallatiri volcano and drains the area of the Nevados de Quimsachata ; this river contributes about 4/5 of the water to the lake and enters Chungará Lake on its southeastern corner through a river delta. Other tributaries are the Chachapay, Mal Paso, Ajata and Sopocalane creeks which originate on Choquelimpie/Ajoya volcano, which have formed river deltas where they enter the lake; some of the deltas are submerged. In addition, springs supply water into the lake from its western and northern shores where volcanoes border the lake. There are no inflows on the eastern side of Chungará Lake.
Chungará Lake has no outlet; its waters evaporate at a rate of about and also seep into the groundwater table at a rate of. The water chemistry of the Cotacotani Lakes imply that they receive water from Chungará Lake at a rate of about ; this constitutes over half of the inflow to the Cotacotani Lakes. The role of this underground outflow has progressively decreased through the history of the lake as silt has accumulated in the breccia through which the groundwater seeps out. The Cotacotani Lakes eventually drain into the Lauca River.
The total volume of the lake is about. Chungará Lake is polymictic/well mixed and its waters transparent enough that sunlight can reach most of the lake floor. The waters of the lake are slightly alkaline and saline and show influence of dolomite rocks. This lake chemistry is homogeneous throughout the lake and the lake waters are subject to strong currents at the surface.

Geology

The lake was formed by volcanic-tectonic phenomena; specifically, a major collapse of the Parinacota volcano dammed a former Rio Lauca, forming Chungará Lake, at some time between 8,000 and 15,000 - 17,000 years ago. This collapse involved about and covered about with debris; before the collapse took place the lakefloor of Chungará Lake consisted of alluvial and river sediments left by the Rio Lauca which drained the area. Upon damming, water from the river accumulated and formed Chungará Lake. The exact time of the collapse is controversial. Faulting also played a minor role in the formation of the lake basin, with a southwest-northeast trending fault disrupting sediments in the northwestern sector of the lake. Since the birth of Chungará Lake, about of sediment have accumulated on its floor.
Volcanism in the area has been ongoing since the Paleozoic and has continued until recent times, which has influenced Chungará Lake. A number of volcanoes such as Parinacota, Ajoya and Quisiquisini grew on a Miocene ignimbrite basement that crops out east of the lake; of these only Parinacota has been active in the Holocene, depositing tephra within the lake.

Climate

Temperatures at the lake average, fluctuating between at day and at night. The climate of Chungará Lake is arid and annual precipitation on Chungará Lake amounts to about, considerably smaller than the evaporation rate. This precipitation occurs during summer when moisture is transported into the region from the Amazon and the Atlantic Ocean; this is known as the "Bolivian Winter". Annual precipitation varies under the influence of the "ENSO" phenomenon. In addition, the area is characterized by a high solar insolation.

Human use

The area of the lake is inhabited by Aymara people who engage in animal husbandry, using alpacas, cattle, llamas and sheep and live on farms and pastoral refuges.

Environmental issues

In the 1970s water was pumped from Chungará Lake to the Azapa Valley to allow for irrigation, but quickly ceased when water levels dropped and the flora and fauna of the lake were damaged. For this purpose, the Canal Chungará was built by the Chilean Ministry of Public Works to transfer water into the Laguna Cotacotani which is the headwater of the Lauca-Azapa system.
This project was opposed by environmentalists. On the 19th December 1985 the lake was the subject of a major legal case when the Chilean Supreme Court ruled that international obligations such as the CITES need to be considered by the Chilean government and prohibited the use of the waters of Chungará Lake; the ruling by disallowing the use of the waters of Chungará Lake forced the Arica y Parinacota Region to seek other sources of water for the growing economy.
Accumulation of rubbish in the area of Chungará Lake has become a major issue, as a lot of waste is discarded by for example drivers on the Chungara–Tambo Quemado road between Chile and Bolivia. The Chilean government has thus organized cleanup operations to remove some of the waste.

Biology

The lake hosts a diverse plant and animal community. The landscape around the lake includes wetlands known as bofedales; otherwise the vegetation in the region of the lake consists mainly of Polylepis dwarf trees, shrubs and tussock grasses.
The shoreline vegetation draws birds in such as Andean gull, Chilean flamingo, crested duck, giant coot and Puna plover.
Aided by the highly transparent waters, large amounts of aquatic plants live in Chungará Lake and are particularly noticeable on the southern shores, where Myriophyllum elatinoides and Potamogeton filifolius occur. The shores are inhabited by amphibians such as Rhinella, Pleurodema and Telmatobius, and by molluscs and turbellaria such as Ancylus, Pisidium and Taphius.
The phytoplankton of the lake is dominated by diatoms in winter and by chlorophyceae in summer. Algae include both the large Cladophora and Nostoc genera and the small Botryococcus braunii, Cocconeis placentula, Cyclotella andina and Nephroclamys subsolitaria; the second and the third are diatoms. Copepods such as calanoids and cladocera make up the zooplankton. Microbial colonies occur on the shores of Chungará Lake.

Fish

The most important and only native fish in Chungará Lake are two endemics; the pupfish Orestias chungarensis and catfish Trichomycterus chungaraensis.
Orestias chungarensis of Chungará Lake is most closely related to other Orestias species in the Lauca National Park but also those found in Salar de Ascotan and Salar de Carcote. This reflects that these waterbodies and the Lauca River were once joined by the former Lake Tauca. In Chungará Lake these fish occur at elevations of over ; Orestias is among the fish with the highest occurrences in the world. They are further considered to be threatened species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature and the Chilean National Museum of Natural History.
The rainbow trout also lives in the lake and is considered an invasive species there as it feeds on the threatened Orestias fish; the Chilean government has thus envisaged to take measures to eradicate the fish from the lake.