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Lake Lugano


Lake Lugano (Italian: Lago di Lugano or Ceresio, from Latin: Ceresius lacus; Lombard: Lagh de Lugan) is a glacial lake which is situated on the border between southern Switzerland and northern Italy. The lake, named after the city of Lugano, is situated between Lake Como and Lago Maggiore. It was cited for the first time by Gregory of Tours in 590 with the name Ceresio,[1] a name which is said to have derived from the Latin word cerasus, meaning cherry, and refers to the abundance of cherry trees which at one time adorned the shores of the lake.[2] The lake appears in documents in 804 under the name Laco Luanasco.[1]

Lake Lugano
Lago di Lugano
Satellite image of Lake Lugano
Lake Lugano
Lake Lugano
Lake Lugano
Lake Lugano
Lake Lugano
Map of the lake
LocationTicino, Lombardy
Coordinates45°59′N 8°58′E / 45.983°N 8.967°E / 45.983; 8.967
Native nameLagh de Lugan (Lombard)
Primary inflowsVedeggio, Cassarate, Cuccio, Mara, Laveggio, Magliasina, Bolletta, Scairolo
Primary outflowsTresa
Catchment area565.6 km2 (218.4 sq mi)
Basin countriesSwitzerland, Italy
Surface area48.7 km2 (18.8 sq mi)
Average depth134 m (440 ft)
Max. depth288 m (945 ft)
Water volume6.5 km3 (1.6 cu mi)
Residence time8.2 years
Surface elevation271 m (889 ft)
Sections/sub-basinsNorth basin, South basin, Ponte Tresa
SettlementsLugano, Melide, Campione d'Italia, Ponte Tresa
Lake Lugano

There are various mountains and tourist destinations on the shores of the lake including Monte Brè to the east, Monte San Salvatore west of Lugano, and Monte Generoso on the south-eastern shore. The World Heritage Site Monte San Giorgio is situated south of the lake. Also located to the south is the Cinque Vette Park.

The lake is drained by the Tresa, which empties into Lake Maggiore, the latter being drained by the Ticino and the Po.

History edit

The first certain testimony of a political body governing the shores of the lake is from 818. Occupying an area of strategic importance, the lake was then part of the feudal dominion of the County of Sperio. Circa 1000, it came under the control of the Bishop of Como. The region was the site of the war between Como and Milan over control of Alpine traffic from 1218 to 1227. As the lake and its shores became progressively incorporated into the Duchy of Milan they became the subject of political and territorial contention during the 15th century, and Lugano became the lake's main town.[1]

The lake definitively ceased to belong to a single sovereign political entity following the establishment of the transalpine bailiwicks of the Swiss cantons at the beginning of the 16th century. The Italian-Swiss border was fixed in 1752 by the Treaty of Varese, and has since remained virtually unchanged.[1]

In 1848, the Melide causeway was built on a moraine between Melide and Bissone, in order to carry a road across the lake and provide a direct connection between Lugano and Chiasso. Today the causeway also carries the Gotthard railway and the A2 motorway.

Geography edit

 
Lake Lugano with the Melide causeway
 
Porlezza, at the head of the lake in Italy

The lake is 48.7 km2 (18.8 sq mi) in size, 63% of which is in Switzerland and 37% in Italy. It has an average width of roughly 1 km (0.62 mi) and a maximum width of about 3 km (1.9 mi) at the bay of Lugano. A maximum depth of 288 m (945 ft) is found in the northern basin. The culminating point of the lake's drainage basin is the Pizzo di Gino summit in the Lugano Prealps (2,245 m; 7,365 ft).[3] Bathing in the lake is allowed at any of the 50 or so bathing establishments located along the Swiss shores.[4]

The Italian exclave of Campione d'Italia and parts of the waters of the lake are considered by European Customs Law as non-territorial for fiscal purposes and as such enjoy a special tax status as a duty-free area, exemption from EU VAT[5] and offer residents other advantageous tax privileges.

The Melide causeway separates the northern (27.5 km2; 10.6 sq mi) and southern (21.4 km2; 8.3 sq mi) basins, although a bridge in the causeway permits water flow and navigation. The lake retention time is an average of 8.2 years; that of the northern basin (11.9 years) is considerably higher than the southern one (2.3 years).

Places on the lake in Switzerland (CH) and in Italy (I) include (from Lugano, clockwise):

Navigation edit

 
One of SNL's passenger boats arriving at Gandria

The lake is navigable, and used by a considerable number of private vessels. Passenger boats of the Società Navigazione del Lago di Lugano (SNL) provide services on the lake, principally for tourist purposes, but also connecting Lugano with other lakeside communities, some of which have no road access.

Fishery in the lake (and Lake Maggiore) is regulated by a 1986 agreement between Switzerland and Italy. The current agreement on navigation dates from 1992.

Pollution edit

Pollution has long been a problem in Lake Lugano. In the 1960s and 1970s it was officially forbidden to bathe in the lake.[6] Despite the continued introduction of sewage treatment plants, such as in Gandria, factors, such as lake retention time and lack of oxygen and increasing phosphorus concentrations, means it is unclear if the lake will recover.

The Federal Office for the Environment's last published report on Lake Lugano dates from 1995.[7] To summarise that report:

  • at that time measurements indicated some improvement, but this was unlikely to continue at the same pace
  • there were almost permanent polluted layers at the bottom of the very deep lake
  • oxygen was scarce and could not be found below 100 m (330 ft) depth
  • as a result phosphorus levels were increasing at this depth
  • phosphorus levels in the northern basin were six times too high and in the southern basin twice too high
  • will take many decades to clean
  • the lake could be said to be "chronically sick"
  • in the Italian part of the lake only 20% of the population were connected to sewage treatment plants with phosphorus filters (not that all Swiss areas were connected either).

The Swiss-Italian organisation CIPAIS in its most recent published report[8] says:

Considering the results obtained in 2009 it can be affirmed that, notwithstanding the observed improvement, Lake Lugano is still in a state of high eutrophication, the highest among Swiss lakes.

The Italian environmental group Legambiente, in its 2007 study of all northern Italian lakes,[9][10] found Lake Lugano to be the most polluted of all.

All water samples were well beyond the legal limits. The polluted sites should not be bathed in for health reasons. Bacteria can cause in the worst case, skin infections, diarrhoea and vomiting.

According to Legambiente, the only reason swimming was not banned on the Italian Lakes was because the state of Lombardy changed the law. They state that pollution levels in the lakes do not conform to European rulings and the lack of sewage treatment is illegal.

Their 2010 measurements[11] found samples taken at Ponte Tresa, Osteno and Porto Ceresio to be "heavily polluted" (more than 1,000 UFC/100 ml intestinal enterococci and/or greater than 2000 UFC/100 ml E. coli).

Fauna edit

 
Swan in Porlezza, Italy

The lake is full of fish. Apart from a few protected areas, such as the mouth of the River Cuccio in Porlezza, fishing is allowed anywhere, although according to various regulations. Protected species are the bleak and the white clawed crayfish (Austropotamobius pallipes). The bleak is almost extinct here, unlike in Lago Maggiore, and planning is under way for the controlled repopulation of the lake, particularly around Ponte Tresa.

In 1895 the brook trout was introduced from Lake Zug, while between 1894 and 1897 the common whitefish was introduced. Since 1950 attempts have been made to introduce the whitefish Coregonus macrophthalmus from Lake Neuchâtel, but it has not established itself effectively.

The Common Roach is present in large numbers and took around ten years to colonise the entire lake, thereby replacing the bleak. Still present are the European chub, tench, carp and a few examples of European perch, largemouth bass, zander and burbot. Recently the wels catfish and pigo have been spotted.

Fossils edit

The whole area behind the southern shores of Lake Lugano is rich in fossils. The focal point of these fossil deposits is Monte San Giorgio, where since the 19th century many fossils have been found dating from the mid-Triassic (around 220 million years ago). The deposits on Monte San Giorgio stretch towards the west into Italian territory and the deposits of Besano. Fossils dating from the early Jurassic (around 180 million years ago) have also been found along the southern shores but more towards the east and Osteno.

Panorama edit

 
View of Lake Lugano from Monte San Salvatore, with Lugano to the left and the Melide causeway to the right

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Lake Lugano". Historic Dictionary of Switzerland (in Italian). Retrieved 2008-11-23.
  2. ^ . Il Gommone (in Italian). Archived from the original on 2006-05-06. Retrieved 2008-11-22.
  3. ^ 1:25,000 topographic map (Map). Swisstopo. Retrieved 2014-07-28.
  4. ^ . LakeLugano.ch. Società Navigazione Lago di Lugano. Archived from the original on 2008-12-28. Retrieved 2008-11-22. (in Italian)
  5. ^ "European Union Customs Code REGULATION (EU) No 952/2013 OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL". European Union. Retrieved 2016-10-09. See Article 4
  6. ^ "Better quality of life on the lake - the swimming ban in the 70s". Societa Navigazione del Lago di Lugano. 2011. Retrieved 31 March 2011.
  7. ^ "The condition of the lakes in Switzerland". Swiss Federal Office for the Environment. 2009. Retrieved 31 March 2011.
  8. ^ Institute of Earth Sciences of the University of Applied Sciences of Southern Switzerland IST-SUPSI (2009). (PDF). CIPAIS. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 31 March 2011.
  9. ^ "Italy's lakes have sick water". Belfast Telegraph. 27 July 2007. Retrieved 31 March 2011.
  10. ^ North Italy lakes are heavily polluted "State of Lake Lugano", Die Welt (translated), 3 August 2007, accessed March 31, 2011.
  11. ^ "Monitoring data on the lakes Maggiore, Lugano, Varese" Legambiente, 2010, accessed March 31, 2011.

External links edit

  • Lake Lugano Navigation Company (in Italian)—Includes timetables
  • Legambiente
  • CIPAIS Commissione Internazionale per la Protezione delle Acque Italo-Svizzere (in Italian) limnologic reports
  • Coolidge, William Augustus Brevoort (1911). "Lugano, Lake of" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17 (11th ed.). p. 115.
  • Lake Lugano in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
  • Convenzione del 2 dicembre 1992 fra la Svizzera e l’Italia per la disciplina della navigazione sul lago Maggiore e sul lago di Lugano (con R e all.) (in Italian, German, and French) agreement on navigation
  • Convenzione del 19 marzo 1986 tra la Confederazione Svizzera e la Repubblica Italiana per la pesca nelle acque italo-svizzere (in Italian, German, and French) agreement on shipping
  • Waterlevels at Ponte Tresa from the Federal Office for the Environment
  • Waterlevels at Melide, Ferrera from the Federal Office for the Environment

lake, lugano, confused, with, lake, langano, oromia, region, ethiopia, italian, lago, lugano, ceresio, from, latin, ceresius, lacus, lombard, lagh, lugan, glacial, lake, which, situated, border, between, southern, switzerland, northern, italy, lake, named, aft. Not to be confused with Lake Langano in the Oromia Region of Ethiopia Lake Lugano Italian Lago di Lugano or Ceresio from Latin Ceresius lacus Lombard Lagh de Lugan is a glacial lake which is situated on the border between southern Switzerland and northern Italy The lake named after the city of Lugano is situated between Lake Como and Lago Maggiore It was cited for the first time by Gregory of Tours in 590 with the name Ceresio 1 a name which is said to have derived from the Latin word cerasus meaning cherry and refers to the abundance of cherry trees which at one time adorned the shores of the lake 2 The lake appears in documents in 804 under the name Laco Luanasco 1 Lake LuganoLago di LuganoSatellite image of Lake LuganoLake LuganoShow map of Canton of TicinoLake LuganoShow map of LombardyLake LuganoShow map of SwitzerlandLake LuganoShow map of ItalyLake LuganoShow map of AlpsMap of the lakeLocationTicino LombardyCoordinates45 59 N 8 58 E 45 983 N 8 967 E 45 983 8 967Native nameLagh de Lugan Lombard Primary inflowsVedeggio Cassarate Cuccio Mara Laveggio Magliasina Bolletta ScairoloPrimary outflowsTresaCatchment area565 6 km2 218 4 sq mi Basin countriesSwitzerland ItalySurface area48 7 km2 18 8 sq mi Average depth134 m 440 ft Max depth288 m 945 ft Water volume6 5 km3 1 6 cu mi Residence time8 2 yearsSurface elevation271 m 889 ft Sections sub basinsNorth basin South basin Ponte TresaSettlementsLugano Melide Campione d Italia Ponte Tresa Lake LuganoThere are various mountains and tourist destinations on the shores of the lake including Monte Bre to the east Monte San Salvatore west of Lugano and Monte Generoso on the south eastern shore The World Heritage Site Monte San Giorgio is situated south of the lake Also located to the south is the Cinque Vette Park The lake is drained by the Tresa which empties into Lake Maggiore the latter being drained by the Ticino and the Po History editThe first certain testimony of a political body governing the shores of the lake is from 818 Occupying an area of strategic importance the lake was then part of the feudal dominion of the County of Sperio Circa 1000 it came under the control of the Bishop of Como The region was the site of the war between Como and Milan over control of Alpine traffic from 1218 to 1227 As the lake and its shores became progressively incorporated into the Duchy of Milan they became the subject of political and territorial contention during the 15th century and Lugano became the lake s main town 1 The lake definitively ceased to belong to a single sovereign political entity following the establishment of the transalpine bailiwicks of the Swiss cantons at the beginning of the 16th century The Italian Swiss border was fixed in 1752 by the Treaty of Varese and has since remained virtually unchanged 1 In 1848 the Melide causeway was built on a moraine between Melide and Bissone in order to carry a road across the lake and provide a direct connection between Lugano and Chiasso Today the causeway also carries the Gotthard railway and the A2 motorway Geography edit nbsp Lake Lugano with the Melide causeway nbsp Porlezza at the head of the lake in ItalyThe lake is 48 7 km2 18 8 sq mi in size 63 of which is in Switzerland and 37 in Italy It has an average width of roughly 1 km 0 62 mi and a maximum width of about 3 km 1 9 mi at the bay of Lugano A maximum depth of 288 m 945 ft is found in the northern basin The culminating point of the lake s drainage basin is the Pizzo di Gino summit in the Lugano Prealps 2 245 m 7 365 ft 3 Bathing in the lake is allowed at any of the 50 or so bathing establishments located along the Swiss shores 4 The Italian exclave of Campione d Italia and parts of the waters of the lake are considered by European Customs Law as non territorial for fiscal purposes and as such enjoy a special tax status as a duty free area exemption from EU VAT 5 and offer residents other advantageous tax privileges The Melide causeway separates the northern 27 5 km2 10 6 sq mi and southern 21 4 km2 8 3 sq mi basins although a bridge in the causeway permits water flow and navigation The lake retention time is an average of 8 2 years that of the northern basin 11 9 years is considerably higher than the southern one 2 3 years Places on the lake in Switzerland CH and in Italy I include from Lugano clockwise Lugano CH Cassarate CH Castagnola CH Gandria CH Oria Valsolda I San Mamete I Cressogno I Porlezza I Cantine di Gandria CH Caprino CH Campione d Italia I Bissone CH Maroggia CH Melano CH Capolago CH Riva San Vitale CH Brusino Arsizio CH Porto Ceresio I Brusimpiano I Lavena Ponte Tresa I Ponte Tresa I CH Caslano CH Magliaso CH Agno CH Agnuzzo CH Montagnola CH Carabietta CH Figino CH Morcote CH Melide CH Paradiso CH Navigation edit nbsp One of SNL s passenger boats arriving at GandriaThe lake is navigable and used by a considerable number of private vessels Passenger boats of the Societa Navigazione del Lago di Lugano SNL provide services on the lake principally for tourist purposes but also connecting Lugano with other lakeside communities some of which have no road access Fishery in the lake and Lake Maggiore is regulated by a 1986 agreement between Switzerland and Italy The current agreement on navigation dates from 1992 Pollution editPollution has long been a problem in Lake Lugano In the 1960s and 1970s it was officially forbidden to bathe in the lake 6 Despite the continued introduction of sewage treatment plants such as in Gandria factors such as lake retention time and lack of oxygen and increasing phosphorus concentrations means it is unclear if the lake will recover The Federal Office for the Environment s last published report on Lake Lugano dates from 1995 7 To summarise that report at that time measurements indicated some improvement but this was unlikely to continue at the same pace there were almost permanent polluted layers at the bottom of the very deep lake oxygen was scarce and could not be found below 100 m 330 ft depth as a result phosphorus levels were increasing at this depth phosphorus levels in the northern basin were six times too high and in the southern basin twice too high will take many decades to clean the lake could be said to be chronically sick in the Italian part of the lake only 20 of the population were connected to sewage treatment plants with phosphorus filters not that all Swiss areas were connected either The Swiss Italian organisation CIPAIS in its most recent published report 8 says Considering the results obtained in 2009 it can be affirmed that notwithstanding the observed improvement Lake Lugano is still in a state of high eutrophication the highest among Swiss lakes The Italian environmental group Legambiente in its 2007 study of all northern Italian lakes 9 10 found Lake Lugano to be the most polluted of all All water samples were well beyond the legal limits The polluted sites should not be bathed in for health reasons Bacteria can cause in the worst case skin infections diarrhoea and vomiting According to Legambiente the only reason swimming was not banned on the Italian Lakes was because the state of Lombardy changed the law They state that pollution levels in the lakes do not conform to European rulings and the lack of sewage treatment is illegal Their 2010 measurements 11 found samples taken at Ponte Tresa Osteno and Porto Ceresio to be heavily polluted more than 1 000 UFC 100 ml intestinal enterococci and or greater than 2000 UFC 100 ml E coli Fauna edit nbsp Swan in Porlezza ItalyThe lake is full of fish Apart from a few protected areas such as the mouth of the River Cuccio in Porlezza fishing is allowed anywhere although according to various regulations Protected species are the bleak and the white clawed crayfish Austropotamobius pallipes The bleak is almost extinct here unlike in Lago Maggiore and planning is under way for the controlled repopulation of the lake particularly around Ponte Tresa In 1895 the brook trout was introduced from Lake Zug while between 1894 and 1897 the common whitefish was introduced Since 1950 attempts have been made to introduce the whitefish Coregonus macrophthalmus from Lake Neuchatel but it has not established itself effectively The Common Roach is present in large numbers and took around ten years to colonise the entire lake thereby replacing the bleak Still present are the European chub tench carp and a few examples of European perch largemouth bass zander and burbot Recently the wels catfish and pigo have been spotted Fossils editThe whole area behind the southern shores of Lake Lugano is rich in fossils The focal point of these fossil deposits is Monte San Giorgio where since the 19th century many fossils have been found dating from the mid Triassic around 220 million years ago The deposits on Monte San Giorgio stretch towards the west into Italian territory and the deposits of Besano Fossils dating from the early Jurassic around 180 million years ago have also been found along the southern shores but more towards the east and Osteno Panorama edit nbsp View of Lake Lugano from Monte San Salvatore with Lugano to the left and the Melide causeway to the rightSee also editItalian Lakes List of lakes of ItalyReferences edit a b c d Lake Lugano Historic Dictionary of Switzerland in Italian Retrieved 2008 11 23 Itinerari Il Lago dei Ciliegi Il Gommone in Italian Archived from the original on 2006 05 06 Retrieved 2008 11 22 1 25 000 topographic map Map Swisstopo Retrieved 2014 07 28 Stato di Salute del Ceresio LakeLugano ch Societa Navigazione Lago di Lugano Archived from the original on 2008 12 28 Retrieved 2008 11 22 in Italian European Union Customs Code REGULATION EU No 952 2013 OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL European Union Retrieved 2016 10 09 See Article 4 Better quality of life on the lake the swimming ban in the 70s Societa Navigazione del Lago di Lugano 2011 Retrieved 31 March 2011 The condition of the lakes in Switzerland Swiss Federal Office for the Environment 2009 Retrieved 31 March 2011 Institute of Earth Sciences of the University of Applied Sciences of Southern Switzerland IST SUPSI 2009 Ricerche sull evoluzione del Lago di Lugano PDF CIPAIS Archived from the original PDF on 21 July 2011 Retrieved 31 March 2011 Italy s lakes have sick water Belfast Telegraph 27 July 2007 Retrieved 31 March 2011 North Italy lakes are heavily polluted State of Lake Lugano Die Welt translated 3 August 2007 accessed March 31 2011 Monitoring data on the lakes Maggiore Lugano Varese Legambiente 2010 accessed March 31 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lake Lugano Lake Lugano Navigation Company in Italian Includes timetables Legambiente CIPAIS Commissione Internazionale per la Protezione delle Acque Italo Svizzere in Italian limnologic reports Coolidge William Augustus Brevoort 1911 Lugano Lake of Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed p 115 Lake Lugano in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland Convenzione del 2 dicembre 1992 fra la Svizzera e l Italia per la disciplina della navigazione sul lago Maggiore e sul lago di Lugano con R e all in Italian German and French agreement on navigation Convenzione del 19 marzo 1986 tra la Confederazione Svizzera e la Repubblica Italiana per la pesca nelle acque italo svizzere in Italian German and French agreement on shipping Waterlevels at Ponte Tresa from the Federal Office for the Environment Waterlevels at Melide Ferrera from the Federal Office for the Environment Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lake Lugano amp oldid 1151504907, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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