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Melincué Lake

Coordinates: 33°42′24″S 61°29′4″W / 33.70667°S 61.48444°W / -33.70667; -61.48444
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Laguna Melincué
Location of the lake in Argentina.
Location of the lake in Argentina.
Laguna Melincué
LocationGeneral López Department, Santa Fe Province
Coordinates33°42′24″S 61°29′4″W / 33.70667°S 61.48444°W / -33.70667; -61.48444
Typeendorheic lake
Basin countriesArgentina
Surface area120 km2 (2003)
Surface elevation86 m (2003)
82.5 m (1968)
Official nameHumedal Laguna Melincué
Designated24 July 2008
Reference no.1785[1]

The Laguna Melincué is an endorheic lake located in the province of Santa Fe, Argentina, in the General López Department, next to the town of Melincué, at approximately 33°42′24″S 61°29′4″W / 33.70667°S 61.48444°W / -33.70667; -61.48444. It covers a surface area of about 120 km2, and its top water level lies at around 86 m above mean sea level (c. 2003).

The lake forms part of a wetland ecosystem, noted for its large population of waterfowl and other birds, which is protected as a nature reserve. In times of drought the lake's waters became saline. In 2008 an area of 920 km2 has been listed as a Wetland of International Importance under the Ramsar convention.[2]

For decades the water level of the Melincué Lake have varied considerably, often flooding parts of its basin, and over time this has seriously affected the prosperity of the nearby towns and the maintenance of roads around it. According to a study by the Faculty of Engineering of the Universidad Nacional de Rosario, in 1968 the top water level stood at 82.5 m AMSL, more than 3 m below its current height. In 1998–2000 the provincial government passed legislation creating a Strategic Environmental Planning Area covering the surrounding districts (Melincué, Carreras, Hughes, Elortondo and Labordeboy) with the goal of promoting its sustainable development, but major concrete actions have failed to materialize.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Humedal Laguna Melincué". Ramsar Sites Information Service. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  2. ^ Ramsar Database Archived 2009-09-27 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved 2009-09-28