Introduction: Summer at Trout Lake

Every night, the station comes alive as students return from a day of counting bugs, chasing frogs and sampling water. It’s a summer camp for budding scientists.

Bass Surgery

How do you track the underwater movement of a largemouth bass? With a bit of gentle surgery and a radio transmitter.

Dances with Dragonflies

Signs of the graceful, lightning-fast insect may be an harbinger of healthy shorelines.

Surf and Turf Fish Food?

A unique study is finding that terrestrial vegetation — that’s right, leaves and twigs — could make up a significant portion of fish diets.

North Woods Wireless

Thanks to the digital age, assessing a lake’s vital signs is only a few clicks away.

Map depicting Trout Lake location in North-Central Wisconsin.

More than eight decades ago, two enterprising biologists from UW-Madison opened a modest little research outpost on Trout Lake, deep in the heart of Wisconsin’s spectacular northern lake region. The goal was to peer into the fundamental mysteries of freshwater lakes, from their basic chemistry to their elaborate circle of life.

Lake research was virtually uncharted territory back then, and Trout Lake Station helped cement Wisconsin’s place as “the birthplace of limnology.”

Today, research at Trout Lake is thriving more than ever, and many of the fundamental mysteries still remain. But with the profound growth of development and recreational pressure on pristine lakes throughout Wisconsin — and indeed, the world — the research is increasingly aimed at protecting a cherished resource.

This feature package by science writer Paroma Basu explores some of the research in progress in the Trout Lake region, and how findings may lead to better policies protecting what people love best about their lakes.

 

University of Wisconsin-Madison