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Lake Ohrid

Lake Ohrid (Macedonian: Охридско Езеро Ohridsko Ezero [ˈɔxridzkɔ ˈɛzɛrɔ]; Albanian: Liqeni i Ohrit [liˈcɛni i ˈɔhrit]) is a lake which straddles the mountainous border between the southwestern part of North Macedonia and eastern Albania. It is one of Europe's deepest and oldest lakes, with a unique aquatic ecosystem of worldwide importance, with more than 200 endemic species.[2]

Lake Ohrid
Lake Ohrid as seen from Ohrid, North Macedonia
Lake Ohrid
Lake Ohrid
Lake Ohrid
Lake Ohrid
Map of the Ohrid Basin showing major hydrological and geological features
LocationNorth MacedoniaAlbania border
Coordinates41°2′N 20°43′E / 41.033°N 20.717°E / 41.033; 20.717
Lake typeancient lake, tectonic lake
Primary inflowsSateska River, Biljana's springs, underground link with Lake Prespa
Primary outflowsBlack Drin River
Catchment area2,600 km2 (1,000 sq mi)
Basin countriesNorth Macedonia, Albania
Max. length36.4 km (22.6 mi)
Max. width16.8 km (10.4 mi)
Surface area358 km2 (138 sq mi)
Average depth155 m (509 ft)
Max. depth288 m (945 ft)
Water volume55.49 km3 (13.31 cu mi)
Residence time70 years
Shore length187.53 km (54.39 mi)
North Macedonia: 56.02 km (34.81 mi);
Albania: 31.51 km (19.58 mi)
Surface elevation693 m (2,274 ft)
Islandsnone
SettlementsOhrid, Struga (North Macedonia)
Pogradec (Albania)
Official nameNatural and Cultural Heritage of the Ohrid region
TypeNatural, Cultural
Criteriai, iii, iv, vii
Designated1979 (3rd session)
Reference no.99
RegionEurope and North America
Extensions1979, 2019
Designated15 February 2021
Reference no.2449[1]
1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure.

North Macedonia's side of Lake Ohrid was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1979, with the site being extended to also include the cultural and historic area of Ohrid in 1980. In 2010, NASA named one of Titan's lakes after it.[3] In 2014, the Ohrid-Prespa Transboundary Reserve between Albania and North Macedonia was added to UNESCO's World Network of Biosphere Reserves.[4] Albania's side of Lake Ohrid was also designated UNESCO world heritage status in 2019. North Macedonia's portion was designated as a protected Ramsar site in 2021, passing all nine criteria for proclamation.[5]

In Albania, the coastal portion of the lake holds Managed Nature Reserve status. In North Macedonia, a portion of the lakeside is part of the Galičica National Park.

The towns situated at the lakeside are Ohrid and Struga in North Macedonia along with Pogradec in Albania. The lake is otherwise densely surrounded by settlements in the form of villages and resorts in both basin countries.

Geography edit

 
Topographic map with Lake Ohrid on the left

Lake Ohrid is one of the oldest lakes in the world, and with a maximum depth of 288 metres (945 ft) and mean depth of 155 m (509 ft), it is the deepest lake in the Balkans. It covers an area of 358 square kilometres (138 sq mi) and contains an estimated 55.49 cubic kilometres (45 million acre-feet) of water. The lake is 30.4 km (18.9 mi) long and 14.8 km (9.2 mi) wide at its maximum extent, with a shoreline of 87.53 km (54.39 mi).

64% of Lake Ohrid's shoreline and 69% of its surface area are within North Macedonia, whereas 36% of the shoreline and 31% of the surface area fall within Albania.

Origin edit

 
Reconstruction of Bronze Age stilt houses on Lake Ohrid, near Peštani, North Macedonia

The Ohrid and Prespa Lakes are the two largest in a north–south chain of tectonic basins (grabens) including the Korçë basin, and Lake Ioannina in North West of Greece, known as the Dessaret group. The transition from compressional to extensional tectonics in the central Balkan Mts occurred around 6 million years ago, with the oldest lake sediments being Pliocene, possibly 3-5 million years old.[6][7][8] The Dessaret chain is a poorly developed rift valley. Worldwide, rift valley lakes with similarly ancient origins include Lake Baikal, Lake Titicaca, Lake Tanganyika and the Dead Sea. Most lakes have much shorter life spans as they rapidly fill with sediments. Lake Ohrid is being infilled at its north end by its modest main tributaries, but is preserved by its great depth, by continuing tectonic subsidence, and by the main inflows being from underground karstic channels from Lake Prespa carrying minimal sediment. The graben system is still tectonically active and Lake Ohrid sits in a seismogenic landscape, with many visible traces including fresh fault scarps, displaced sediment and soil sequences, stepped hillsides, and a hydrothermal field near Kosel. Moderate earthquakes are frequent, with the strongest yet measured here on 18 February 1911, with a magnitude 6.6 at a focal depth of 15 km, destroying houses but with no loss of life.[9]

Hydrology edit

The lake drains an area of around 2,600 km² and is fed primarily by underground springs on the eastern shore (about 50% of total inflow), with roughly 25% shares from rivers and direct precipitation. Over 20% of the lake's water comes from nearby Lake Prespa, about 10 km (6.2 mi) to the southeast and at 150 m higher altitude than Lake Ohrid. The water leaves Lake Prespa trickling through underground watercourses in the karstic landscape, where it is joined by mountain range precipitation and eventually emerges in numerous springs along the eastern shore and below the water surface of Lake Ohrid. The water leaves Lake Ohrid by evaporation (~40%) and through its only outlet, the Black Drin River, which flows in a northerly direction into Albania and thus to the Adriatic Sea. The relatively dry, Mediterranean climate and the small drainage basin of 2,600 km² (catchment/lake surface ratio of ~7) of Lake Ohrid results in a long hydraulic residence time scale of ~70 yr.[10][11][12]

Physical and geochemical properties edit

The water at the surface of Lake Ohrid moves predominantly in a counter-clockwise direction along the shore, as a result of wind forcing and the Earth rotation, similar to the Ekman-phenomenon known from oceans. In terms of vertical water exchange, convective mixing during winter cooling is the dominant process. However, in an average winter only the top 150–200 meters of the lake are mixed, whereas the water below is stably stratified by salinity. The stability due to this salinity gradient allows complete convective mixing events only roughly once every 7 years.[11][13]

Both in terms of nutrient concentration (4.5 μg L−1 of phosphorus), as well as biological parameters Lake Ohrid qualifies as oligotrophic. Thanks to this oligotrophy and the filtered spring inflows, the water is exceptionally clear with transparencies to a depth of as much as 22 meters (66 feet). Lake Ohrid lacks an annual deep water exchange which in other lakes can bring complete overturn; plunging rivers are also absent. Despite this, dissolved oxygen never drops below ~6 mg L−1.[14][15]

Wetland habitats edit

Previously extensive wetland habitats in the vicinity of Lake Ohrid have been lost due to conversion into agricultural or urban land. These include Struga Marsh, large portions of which were drained for agriculture in the 1940s[16] and again in the 1960s when the River Sateska was rerouted.[17]

Nowadays, the last remaining significant coastline wetland at Lake Ohrid is Studenchishte Marsh,[16] which is located on the eastern shore near the city of Ohrid. Despite degradation from a variety of sources such as large-scale disposal of construction waste, major land conversion, disruption of water connections to Lake Ohrid, beach urbanization and loss of reed belts,[16] Studenchishte Marsh is still an important buffer to prevent lake eutrophication[18] and a key habitat for biodiversity, including relict plants and endemic species.[16] These values, and the comparative rareness of similar habitats in Macedonia (now North Macedonia), prompted an expert team in 2012 to recommend designation of a 63.97-hectare area at Studenchishte Marsh to be protected as a Natural Monument under Macedonian law.[19]

Changes to the General Urban Plan for Ohrid 2014–2020, however, made provisions for Studenchishte Marsh to be drained and replaced with infrastructure for tourism and water-sports,[16][20] a proposal which, together with other regional developments, was opposed by numerous local and international experts,[21] including the Society of Wetland Scientists.[22] A Strategic Environmental Assessment also concluded that no measure except non-implementation could reduce the direct negative impact on Studenchishte and the indirect negative impact on Lake Ohrid if the proposed construction was to take place at the wetland.[23] Plans to drain the area have subsequently been reversed and the Macedonian government announced in 2018 that it would move forward with proclamation of Studenchishte Marsh as a protected area and its designation together with Lake Ohrid as a Wetland of International Importance under the Ramsar Convention.[24] Ramsar status was formalized in 2021[1] although protection of Studenchishte Marsh at the national level has not yet been completed.

The IUCN identifies wetland rehabilitation as one of five potential site needs for the UNESCO Natural and Cultural Heritage of the Ohrid Region.[25] However, the potential to restore Struga Marsh, which was not included in the boundaries of the Ramsar Site, is likely to be reduced by construction of the European Corridor VIII railway, while Studenchishte's future is yet to be fully resolved.[26]

Fauna edit

 
Ohrid sponge (Ochridaspongia rotunda) is endemic to Lake Ohrid

Measured by its surface area of 358 km², Ohrid is probably among the most biodiverse lakes on Earth.[7] While it is special as such, by far the most spectacular quality is its impressive endemism. Similar to Lake Baikal or Lake Tanganyika, Lake Ohrid harbors endemic species covering the whole food-chain, from phytoplankton and sessile algae (20 species; e.g., Cyclotella fottii), over plant species (2 species; e.g., Chara ohridana), zooplankton (5 species; e.g., Cyclops ochridanus), cyprinid fish (8 species; e.g., Pachychilon pictum), to predatory fish (two trout species; the Ohrid trout complex Salmo letnica, and "Belvica" Salmo ohridanus) and finally its diverse endemic bottom fauna (176 species; e.g. Ochridagammarus solidus), with particularly large endemism among crustaceans, molluscs, sponges and planarians. There were recorded 68 species of freshwater snails from the Lake Ohrid basin.[27] 73.5% (50 species) of the total freshwater gastropod fauna appear to be endemic to the Lake Ohrid basin.[27] Whereas the endemic species list cited above is based on morphological and ecological characteristics, some recent applications of molecular genetic techniques underline the difference of the fauna from common European taxa, as well as the old age of the lake.[28][29][30]

Quite remarkably, exotic species do not seem to be a major issue in Lake Ohrid, although they have been recorded in small populations for several decades or exist in nearby rivers or lakes. The reason lies very probably in the ideal adaptation of the endemic species to the specific conditions in the lake, such as low nutrient availability, good living conditions in greater depth thanks to high water transparency and oxygen content, as well as subaquatic spring inflows supplying cool and oxygen-rich water.[28] In total, seven introduced fish species are known from the lake.[31]

Despite the exceptionally high level of endemism in Lake Ohrid (for example, a third of the 21 native fish species and almost 80% of its 72 mollusc species are endemic), a significant number of non-endemic species are found in Lake Ohrid. This includes species, which are mobile (e.g., via water birds) or migratory, such as the European eel.[31][32][33]

Birds edit

The lakeshore reed beds and wetlands provide critical habitat for hundreds of thousands of wintering water birds, including rare and threatened species such as the Dalmatian pelican, ferruginous duck, swan, spotted eagle, and eastern imperial eagle. The Macedonian part of the lake has been designated an Important Bird Area (IBA) by BirdLife International because it supports populations of common coots and pygmy cormorants (Microcarbo pygmaeus).[34] The Albanian part of the lake has been designated a separate but corresponding IBA for the same reason, with additional bird species being common goldeneyes, red-crested pochards (Netta rufina) and black-necked grebes.[35] Wetland of International Importance status under the Ramsar Convention is underpinned in part by the biogeographically significant populations of red-crested pochard and pygmy cormorants too, but also goosander (Mergus merganser).[5]

Socio-economy edit

 
Church of St. John Kaneo and the Ohrid Lake
 
Lake Ohrid and the small village of Lin, near Pogradec in Albania

There are three cities on the lake's shores: Ohrid and Struga on the Macedonian side; and Pogradec in Albania. There are also several fishing villages, although tourism is now a more significant part of their income. The catchment area of the lake has a population of around 170,000 people, with 131,000 people living directly at the lake shore (43,000 in Albania and 88,000 in North Macedonia). The population in the catchment has increased by 100,000 people in the last half century, putting the lake's fragile ecosystem under pressure.[citation needed]

The historic monuments, as well as the pristine lake environment, make the area around Lake Ohrid a prime site for tourism. In the 1980s, more than 200,000 national and international tourists went on a pilgrimage to the Macedonian lake side every year. During the Yugoslav crisis and particularly after the interethnic conflicts within North Macedonia in 2001, international tourism collapsed but has been slowly recovering. Even though many visitors are staying for a weekend only, tourism makes an important contribution to the local economy (~1 visitor/inhabitant).[10][14]

Historically, Lake Ohrid was close to a main highway of the Roman Empire, the Via Egnatia, from Durrës on the coast of Albania to Thessalonika and Constantinople (Istanbul), but now is a communications backwater. There is a minor road around the lake, with border crossings between Albania and North Macedonia. Religious monuments such as the Black Madonna south west of Struga and St Naum monastery are counterposed with ravages of war, such as the fortifications of the Macedonian Front across Galicica Mountain.[36]

World Heritage Site edit

 
View of Ohrid and Ohrid Lake from Samuil's Fortress
 
View of old Ohrid

The Macedonian side of Lake Ohrid was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO at the 3rd Session of the World Heritage Committee in 1979[37] and holds that status under Criterion VII as a superlative natural phenomenon related to its refuge function for relict and world-unique freshwater species, and its rich bird life.[38] The lake became part of a mixed Natural and Cultural World Heritage Site in 1980 when the city of Ohrid in Macedonia was also designated with UNESCO status for its architectural, artistic and religious values.[38]

Concern over current and potential deterioration of the World Heritage Site prompted invitation of a joint Reactive Monitoring Mission by the World Heritage Centre, IUCN and ICOMOS in April 2017, which identified a wide range of pressures including from transport infrastructure, traffic, tourism developments, overfishing, sewerage, solid waste disposal, invasive species, both legal and illegal construction, and management of water levels.[26] The mission report devised 19 recommendations for Macedonia, which were incorporated under Decision 41 COM 7B.34 of the World Heritage Committee at its 41st Session in Krakow, Poland in 2017.[39]

In May 2019, the UNESCO World Heritage Centre expanded the World Heritage Site to the Albanian side of the lake.[38] In addition, draft Decision 43 COM 7B.36 was released[40] recommending for the Ohrid region, including Lake Ohrid, to be placed on the List of World Heritage in Danger during the 43rd Session of the World Heritage Committee in Baku, Azerbaijan. This position aligns with IUCN advice.[41] In its analysis and conclusions, the World Heritage Centre observed threats to Lake Ohrid from "decreased water levels, uncontrolled discharge, water pollution due to inadequate wastewater treatment systems leading to evident eutrophication at the mouths of intake rivers, heavy pressures from tourism, and extensive uncontrolled urban development and inappropriate exploitation of the coastal zones." It also observed that the majority of recommendations from the 2017 Reactive Monitoring Mission had not been implemented.

Science and research edit

Due to its size, accessibility and species richness, Lake Ohrid is extremely well-suited to the function of a natural laboratory.[27] Deep sediment cores augmented by diverse ecology in the present day offer an extensive archive from which to understand the history of its region over the past 1,200,000 years.[42][43]

Research to date has investigated biodiversity processes,[7][44] the interplay between geological and biological evolution,[45] the birth of European agriculture,[46] and investigations of regional climate and environmental conditions over hundreds of thousands of years.[47]

Among other contributions, such research has delivered the first empirical evidence for niche-based assembly processes from a natural system and demonstrated the establishment of dynamic equilibrium in an isolated ecosystem during the slowdown of both speciation and extinction rates.[48] It has also demonstrated the importance of tree cover for buffering soil erosion during times of climate change[49] and provided insight into the composition of regional flora through glacial and inter-glacial periods.[47]

Human influence edit

 
The lake coast at St. Naum Monastery, with Galičica Mountain in the background.

Shore habitats are under particular pressure from human activities. Particular threats are the building of tourist facilities directly at the shore, destroying of reed belts to gain agricultural land and intense pollution close to the mouth of tributaries. Although the effects of these human impacts have not been evaluated in detail they are of great concern, as the shallow water sites are particularly rich in endemic bottom fauna and form important spawning grounds for several endemic fish species. Moreover, reed belts have great importance for water birds.[15]

Commercial fish yield, i.e. the two endemic trout species, has dropped significantly over the past decades, both in North Macedonia and in Albania. The most probable reason is overfishing and possibly destruction of spawning grounds. Pollution may also be a factor.[50] Although there are regulations regarding fishing practice (e.g. minimal mesh size) and only a limited number of licensed fishermen, these rules are always not obeyed as a result of the high market value of the endemic trout. As a reaction to the situation, a seven-year moratorium on fishing Ohrid trout was imposed from 2004 to help the population recover and to allow scientists collect further data. Nonetheless, even though thorough assessment of fish stocks has not been conducted since the 1990s[17] and trout populations are still believed to be in decline,[50] fishing with quotas was restarted in 2012 under the auspices of a concessionaire.[26] More data is required to determine whether these current fishing levels are sustainable[25] and illegal fishing, particularly on the Albanian side of the lake,[26] remains a problem.

While most of the endemic fish species are non-migratory, the European eel spawns in the distant Sargasso Sea while its offspring return to the lake. Unfortunately, as in many European lakes, it is very unlikely today that eels can reach Lake Ohrid naturally and return to the Sargasso Sea, as a result of several hydropower dams on the Black Drin and the Drin River, both in North Macedonia and Albania. As a result, eel found in Lake Ohrid are stocked populations.[15]

 
Pogradec along Lake Ohrid

Given the population growth over the past 50 years, a particular concern is the potential eutrophication of currently oligotrophic Lake Ohrid from increased pollution. Indeed, sediment cores show a ~3.5 fold increase in phosphorus concentration over the past century. On the one hand, shifts from endemic to common European species, which are better adapted to higher nutrient conditions, have already been observed close to polluted inflows. On the other hand, higher nutrient levels have reduced the water transparency, as well as the oxygen availability in the deep water and at the lake bottom, two properties which are requisite for the endemic flora and fauna. Still, the lake is in a comparably good state at the moment. However it may take more than a decade to see the effects of today's pollution level in the lake, because of its long water residence time. Moreover, it was shown that the negative effects from eutrophication would be significantly amplified by global warming. Although there is time to react, computer simulations indicate that at least a 50% reduction in phosphorus input must be reached to keep the deep water oxygenated for the next 50 years at predicted atmospheric warming. This aim could be reached by controlling household wastewater, which is by far the biggest phosphorus source at the moment. First steps in that direction have been taken by extending and improving the existing sewage system in North Macedonia in the framework of a GEF (Global Environment Facility) program. The most important next task would be a solution for three remaining, severely polluted tributaries, one in North Macedonia and two in Albania.[14][15]

Declaration on the Protection of the Lake Ohrid Ecosystem edit

On 3 May 2018, the Society of Wetland Scientists released the Declaration on the Protection of the Lake Ohrid Ecosystem, which was passed unanimously by 45 attending members at its 13th annual Europe meeting.[51] Urging Macedonian authorities to substantially enhance protection of Lake Ohrid, the declaration outlines the unique significance of the interconnected Ohrid-Prespa lake system, both for its biodiversity and relevance to research on climate and evolution, and recommends measures for future management including revitalization and enlargement of wetland areas, pollution control and a re-orientation of tourism policy.[52] It further describes the "critical importance" of the last intact marsh on the Lake Ohrid shore, Studenchishte Marsh, in terms of its species composition and ecosystem services such as water quality improvement, carbon storage and flood retention among others.[52]

Namesakes edit

Lake Ohrid is also the namesake of Ohrid Lacus, a hydrocarbon lake on the Saturnian moon Titan. It is composed of liquid methane and ethane[53] and is located 71.8°N 221.9°W on Titan's globe.

See also edit

References edit

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  39. ^ World Heritage Committee (2017) Decision 41 COM 7B.34.
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  44. ^ T. Hauffe, C. Albrecht, K. Schreiber, K. Birkhofer, S. Trajanovski, and T. Wilke (2011) Spatially explicit analysis of gastropod biodiversity in ancient Lake Ohrid. Biogeosciences, 8, 175–188.
  45. ^ Wagner, B.; et al. (2017). "The environmental and evolutionary history of Lake Ohrid (FYROM/Albania)". Biogeosciences. 14: 2033–2054. doi:10.5194/bg-14-2033-2017.
  46. ^ "6,4 Million Euros for research into the birth of agriculture in Europe". Universitat Bern. 23 October 2018. Retrieved 27 June 2019.
  47. ^ a b Sadori, L; et al. (2016). "Pollen-based paleoenvironmental and paleoclimatic change at Lake Ohrid (south-eastern Europe) during the past 500 ka". Biogeosciences. 13 (5): 1423–1437. Bibcode:2016BGeo...13.1423S. doi:10.5194/bg-13-1423-2016.
  48. ^ Species In Ancient Lakes (SIAL) (2018) SIAL 8 Conference Program and Abstracts. Justus Liebig University Giessen, Germany and Mbarara University of Science and Technology, Uganda.
  49. ^ Dosseto, Anthony; Francke, Alex (31 May 2019). "Trees, the ancient Macedonians, and the world's first environmental disaster". The Conversation. Retrieved 27 June 2019.
  50. ^ a b Jordanova, Maja; Rebok, Katerina; Rocha, Eduardo (2016). "Liver pathology of female Ohrid trout (Salmo letnica kar.) from the eastern coast of lake ohrid: Baseline data suggesting the presence of a pollution gradient". Turkish Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. 16 (2). doi:10.4194/1303-2712-v16_2_03.
  51. ^ "The Declaration on the Protection of the Lake Ohrid Ecosystem". www.ohridsos.org. 10 May 2018. Retrieved 28 May 2018.
  52. ^ a b Society of Wetland Scientists (2018) The Declaration on The Protection of the Lake Ohrid Ecosystem (Available 28/5/2018 via http://www.sws.org/images/chapters/europe/Declaration.pdf)
  53. ^ Coustenis, A.; Taylor, F. W. (21 July 2008). Titan: Exploring an Earthlike World. World Scientific. pp. 154–155. ISBN 978-981-281-161-5.

External links edit

  • Ohrid Municipality
  • Official website for Info, Places to visit and reservations in Ohrid
  • Macedonia Tourism portal
  • Pogradec Travel Guide
  • LakeNet Profile
  • Ohrid SOS

lake, ohrid, macedonian, Охридско, Езеро, ohridsko, ezero, ˈɔxridzkɔ, ˈɛzɛrɔ, albanian, liqeni, ohrit, liˈcɛni, ˈɔhrit, lake, which, straddles, mountainous, border, between, southwestern, part, north, macedonia, eastern, albania, europe, deepest, oldest, lakes. Lake Ohrid Macedonian Ohridsko Ezero Ohridsko Ezero ˈɔxridzkɔ ˈɛzɛrɔ Albanian Liqeni i Ohrit liˈcɛni i ˈɔhrit is a lake which straddles the mountainous border between the southwestern part of North Macedonia and eastern Albania It is one of Europe s deepest and oldest lakes with a unique aquatic ecosystem of worldwide importance with more than 200 endemic species 2 Lake OhridLake Ohrid as seen from Ohrid North MacedoniaLake OhridShow map of North MacedoniaLake OhridShow map of AlbaniaLake OhridShow map of BalkansLake OhridShow map of EuropeMap of the Ohrid Basin showing major hydrological and geological featuresLocationNorth Macedonia Albania borderCoordinates41 2 N 20 43 E 41 033 N 20 717 E 41 033 20 717Lake typeancient lake tectonic lakePrimary inflowsSateska River Biljana s springs underground link with Lake PrespaPrimary outflowsBlack Drin RiverCatchment area2 600 km2 1 000 sq mi Basin countriesNorth Macedonia AlbaniaMax length36 4 km 22 6 mi Max width16 8 km 10 4 mi Surface area358 km2 138 sq mi Average depth155 m 509 ft Max depth288 m 945 ft Water volume55 49 km3 13 31 cu mi Residence time70 yearsShore length187 53 km 54 39 mi North Macedonia 56 02 km 34 81 mi Albania 31 51 km 19 58 mi Surface elevation693 m 2 274 ft IslandsnoneSettlementsOhrid Struga North Macedonia Pogradec Albania UNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameNatural and Cultural Heritage of the Ohrid regionTypeNatural CulturalCriteriai iii iv viiDesignated1979 3rd session Reference no 99RegionEurope and North AmericaExtensions1979 2019Ramsar WetlandDesignated15 February 2021Reference no 2449 1 1 Shore length is not a well defined measure North Macedonia s side of Lake Ohrid was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1979 with the site being extended to also include the cultural and historic area of Ohrid in 1980 In 2010 NASA named one of Titan s lakes after it 3 In 2014 the Ohrid Prespa Transboundary Reserve between Albania and North Macedonia was added to UNESCO s World Network of Biosphere Reserves 4 Albania s side of Lake Ohrid was also designated UNESCO world heritage status in 2019 North Macedonia s portion was designated as a protected Ramsar site in 2021 passing all nine criteria for proclamation 5 In Albania the coastal portion of the lake holds Managed Nature Reserve status In North Macedonia a portion of the lakeside is part of the Galicica National Park The towns situated at the lakeside are Ohrid and Struga in North Macedonia along with Pogradec in Albania The lake is otherwise densely surrounded by settlements in the form of villages and resorts in both basin countries Contents 1 Geography 2 Origin 3 Hydrology 4 Physical and geochemical properties 5 Wetland habitats 6 Fauna 6 1 Birds 7 Socio economy 8 World Heritage Site 9 Science and research 10 Human influence 11 Declaration on the Protection of the Lake Ohrid Ecosystem 12 Namesakes 13 See also 14 References 15 External linksGeography edit nbsp Topographic map with Lake Ohrid on the leftLake Ohrid is one of the oldest lakes in the world and with a maximum depth of 288 metres 945 ft and mean depth of 155 m 509 ft it is the deepest lake in the Balkans It covers an area of 358 square kilometres 138 sq mi and contains an estimated 55 49 cubic kilometres 45 million acre feet of water The lake is 30 4 km 18 9 mi long and 14 8 km 9 2 mi wide at its maximum extent with a shoreline of 87 53 km 54 39 mi 64 of Lake Ohrid s shoreline and 69 of its surface area are within North Macedonia whereas 36 of the shoreline and 31 of the surface area fall within Albania Origin edit nbsp Reconstruction of Bronze Age stilt houses on Lake Ohrid near Pestani North MacedoniaThe Ohrid and Prespa Lakes are the two largest in a north south chain of tectonic basins grabens including the Korce basin and Lake Ioannina in North West of Greece known as the Dessaret group The transition from compressional to extensional tectonics in the central Balkan Mts occurred around 6 million years ago with the oldest lake sediments being Pliocene possibly 3 5 million years old 6 7 8 The Dessaret chain is a poorly developed rift valley Worldwide rift valley lakes with similarly ancient origins include Lake Baikal Lake Titicaca Lake Tanganyika and the Dead Sea Most lakes have much shorter life spans as they rapidly fill with sediments Lake Ohrid is being infilled at its north end by its modest main tributaries but is preserved by its great depth by continuing tectonic subsidence and by the main inflows being from underground karstic channels from Lake Prespa carrying minimal sediment The graben system is still tectonically active and Lake Ohrid sits in a seismogenic landscape with many visible traces including fresh fault scarps displaced sediment and soil sequences stepped hillsides and a hydrothermal field near Kosel Moderate earthquakes are frequent with the strongest yet measured here on 18 February 1911 with a magnitude 6 6 at a focal depth of 15 km destroying houses but with no loss of life 9 Hydrology editThe lake drains an area of around 2 600 km and is fed primarily by underground springs on the eastern shore about 50 of total inflow with roughly 25 shares from rivers and direct precipitation Over 20 of the lake s water comes from nearby Lake Prespa about 10 km 6 2 mi to the southeast and at 150 m higher altitude than Lake Ohrid The water leaves Lake Prespa trickling through underground watercourses in the karstic landscape where it is joined by mountain range precipitation and eventually emerges in numerous springs along the eastern shore and below the water surface of Lake Ohrid The water leaves Lake Ohrid by evaporation 40 and through its only outlet the Black Drin River which flows in a northerly direction into Albania and thus to the Adriatic Sea The relatively dry Mediterranean climate and the small drainage basin of 2 600 km catchment lake surface ratio of 7 of Lake Ohrid results in a long hydraulic residence time scale of 70 yr 10 11 12 Physical and geochemical properties editThe water at the surface of Lake Ohrid moves predominantly in a counter clockwise direction along the shore as a result of wind forcing and the Earth rotation similar to the Ekman phenomenon known from oceans In terms of vertical water exchange convective mixing during winter cooling is the dominant process However in an average winter only the top 150 200 meters of the lake are mixed whereas the water below is stably stratified by salinity The stability due to this salinity gradient allows complete convective mixing events only roughly once every 7 years 11 13 Both in terms of nutrient concentration 4 5 mg L 1 of phosphorus as well as biological parameters Lake Ohrid qualifies as oligotrophic Thanks to this oligotrophy and the filtered spring inflows the water is exceptionally clear with transparencies to a depth of as much as 22 meters 66 feet Lake Ohrid lacks an annual deep water exchange which in other lakes can bring complete overturn plunging rivers are also absent Despite this dissolved oxygen never drops below 6 mg L 1 14 15 Wetland habitats editPreviously extensive wetland habitats in the vicinity of Lake Ohrid have been lost due to conversion into agricultural or urban land These include Struga Marsh large portions of which were drained for agriculture in the 1940s 16 and again in the 1960s when the River Sateska was rerouted 17 Nowadays the last remaining significant coastline wetland at Lake Ohrid is Studenchishte Marsh 16 which is located on the eastern shore near the city of Ohrid Despite degradation from a variety of sources such as large scale disposal of construction waste major land conversion disruption of water connections to Lake Ohrid beach urbanization and loss of reed belts 16 Studenchishte Marsh is still an important buffer to prevent lake eutrophication 18 and a key habitat for biodiversity including relict plants and endemic species 16 These values and the comparative rareness of similar habitats in Macedonia now North Macedonia prompted an expert team in 2012 to recommend designation of a 63 97 hectare area at Studenchishte Marsh to be protected as a Natural Monument under Macedonian law 19 Changes to the General Urban Plan for Ohrid 2014 2020 however made provisions for Studenchishte Marsh to be drained and replaced with infrastructure for tourism and water sports 16 20 a proposal which together with other regional developments was opposed by numerous local and international experts 21 including the Society of Wetland Scientists 22 A Strategic Environmental Assessment also concluded that no measure except non implementation could reduce the direct negative impact on Studenchishte and the indirect negative impact on Lake Ohrid if the proposed construction was to take place at the wetland 23 Plans to drain the area have subsequently been reversed and the Macedonian government announced in 2018 that it would move forward with proclamation of Studenchishte Marsh as a protected area and its designation together with Lake Ohrid as a Wetland of International Importance under the Ramsar Convention 24 Ramsar status was formalized in 2021 1 although protection of Studenchishte Marsh at the national level has not yet been completed The IUCN identifies wetland rehabilitation as one of five potential site needs for the UNESCO Natural and Cultural Heritage of the Ohrid Region 25 However the potential to restore Struga Marsh which was not included in the boundaries of the Ramsar Site is likely to be reduced by construction of the European Corridor VIII railway while Studenchishte s future is yet to be fully resolved 26 Fauna edit nbsp Ohrid sponge Ochridaspongia rotunda is endemic to Lake OhridMeasured by its surface area of 358 km Ohrid is probably among the most biodiverse lakes on Earth 7 While it is special as such by far the most spectacular quality is its impressive endemism Similar to Lake Baikal or Lake Tanganyika Lake Ohrid harbors endemic species covering the whole food chain from phytoplankton and sessile algae 20 species e g Cyclotella fottii over plant species 2 species e g Chara ohridana zooplankton 5 species e g Cyclops ochridanus cyprinid fish 8 species e g Pachychilon pictum to predatory fish two trout species the Ohrid trout complex Salmo letnica and Belvica Salmo ohridanus and finally its diverse endemic bottom fauna 176 species e g Ochridagammarus solidus with particularly large endemism among crustaceans molluscs sponges and planarians There were recorded 68 species of freshwater snails from the Lake Ohrid basin 27 73 5 50 species of the total freshwater gastropod fauna appear to be endemic to the Lake Ohrid basin 27 Whereas the endemic species list cited above is based on morphological and ecological characteristics some recent applications of molecular genetic techniques underline the difference of the fauna from common European taxa as well as the old age of the lake 28 29 30 Quite remarkably exotic species do not seem to be a major issue in Lake Ohrid although they have been recorded in small populations for several decades or exist in nearby rivers or lakes The reason lies very probably in the ideal adaptation of the endemic species to the specific conditions in the lake such as low nutrient availability good living conditions in greater depth thanks to high water transparency and oxygen content as well as subaquatic spring inflows supplying cool and oxygen rich water 28 In total seven introduced fish species are known from the lake 31 Despite the exceptionally high level of endemism in Lake Ohrid for example a third of the 21 native fish species and almost 80 of its 72 mollusc species are endemic a significant number of non endemic species are found in Lake Ohrid This includes species which are mobile e g via water birds or migratory such as the European eel 31 32 33 Birds edit The lakeshore reed beds and wetlands provide critical habitat for hundreds of thousands of wintering water birds including rare and threatened species such as the Dalmatian pelican ferruginous duck swan spotted eagle and eastern imperial eagle The Macedonian part of the lake has been designated an Important Bird Area IBA by BirdLife International because it supports populations of common coots and pygmy cormorants Microcarbo pygmaeus 34 The Albanian part of the lake has been designated a separate but corresponding IBA for the same reason with additional bird species being common goldeneyes red crested pochards Netta rufina and black necked grebes 35 Wetland of International Importance status under the Ramsar Convention is underpinned in part by the biogeographically significant populations of red crested pochard and pygmy cormorants too but also goosander Mergus merganser 5 Socio economy edit nbsp Church of St John Kaneo and the Ohrid Lake nbsp Lake Ohrid and the small village of Lin near Pogradec in AlbaniaThere are three cities on the lake s shores Ohrid and Struga on the Macedonian side and Pogradec in Albania There are also several fishing villages although tourism is now a more significant part of their income The catchment area of the lake has a population of around 170 000 people with 131 000 people living directly at the lake shore 43 000 in Albania and 88 000 in North Macedonia The population in the catchment has increased by 100 000 people in the last half century putting the lake s fragile ecosystem under pressure citation needed The historic monuments as well as the pristine lake environment make the area around Lake Ohrid a prime site for tourism In the 1980s more than 200 000 national and international tourists went on a pilgrimage to the Macedonian lake side every year During the Yugoslav crisis and particularly after the interethnic conflicts within North Macedonia in 2001 international tourism collapsed but has been slowly recovering Even though many visitors are staying for a weekend only tourism makes an important contribution to the local economy 1 visitor inhabitant 10 14 Historically Lake Ohrid was close to a main highway of the Roman Empire the Via Egnatia from Durres on the coast of Albania to Thessalonika and Constantinople Istanbul but now is a communications backwater There is a minor road around the lake with border crossings between Albania and North Macedonia Religious monuments such as the Black Madonna south west of Struga and St Naum monastery are counterposed with ravages of war such as the fortifications of the Macedonian Front across Galicica Mountain 36 World Heritage Site edit nbsp View of Ohrid and Ohrid Lake from Samuil s Fortress nbsp View of old OhridThe Macedonian side of Lake Ohrid was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO at the 3rd Session of the World Heritage Committee in 1979 37 and holds that status under Criterion VII as a superlative natural phenomenon related to its refuge function for relict and world unique freshwater species and its rich bird life 38 The lake became part of a mixed Natural and Cultural World Heritage Site in 1980 when the city of Ohrid in Macedonia was also designated with UNESCO status for its architectural artistic and religious values 38 Concern over current and potential deterioration of the World Heritage Site prompted invitation of a joint Reactive Monitoring Mission by the World Heritage Centre IUCN and ICOMOS in April 2017 which identified a wide range of pressures including from transport infrastructure traffic tourism developments overfishing sewerage solid waste disposal invasive species both legal and illegal construction and management of water levels 26 The mission report devised 19 recommendations for Macedonia which were incorporated under Decision 41 COM 7B 34 of the World Heritage Committee at its 41st Session in Krakow Poland in 2017 39 In May 2019 the UNESCO World Heritage Centre expanded the World Heritage Site to the Albanian side of the lake 38 In addition draft Decision 43 COM 7B 36 was released 40 recommending for the Ohrid region including Lake Ohrid to be placed on the List of World Heritage in Danger during the 43rd Session of the World Heritage Committee in Baku Azerbaijan This position aligns with IUCN advice 41 In its analysis and conclusions the World Heritage Centre observed threats to Lake Ohrid from decreased water levels uncontrolled discharge water pollution due to inadequate wastewater treatment systems leading to evident eutrophication at the mouths of intake rivers heavy pressures from tourism and extensive uncontrolled urban development and inappropriate exploitation of the coastal zones It also observed that the majority of recommendations from the 2017 Reactive Monitoring Mission had not been implemented Science and research editDue to its size accessibility and species richness Lake Ohrid is extremely well suited to the function of a natural laboratory 27 Deep sediment cores augmented by diverse ecology in the present day offer an extensive archive from which to understand the history of its region over the past 1 200 000 years 42 43 Research to date has investigated biodiversity processes 7 44 the interplay between geological and biological evolution 45 the birth of European agriculture 46 and investigations of regional climate and environmental conditions over hundreds of thousands of years 47 Among other contributions such research has delivered the first empirical evidence for niche based assembly processes from a natural system and demonstrated the establishment of dynamic equilibrium in an isolated ecosystem during the slowdown of both speciation and extinction rates 48 It has also demonstrated the importance of tree cover for buffering soil erosion during times of climate change 49 and provided insight into the composition of regional flora through glacial and inter glacial periods 47 Human influence edit nbsp The lake coast at St Naum Monastery with Galicica Mountain in the background Shore habitats are under particular pressure from human activities Particular threats are the building of tourist facilities directly at the shore destroying of reed belts to gain agricultural land and intense pollution close to the mouth of tributaries Although the effects of these human impacts have not been evaluated in detail they are of great concern as the shallow water sites are particularly rich in endemic bottom fauna and form important spawning grounds for several endemic fish species Moreover reed belts have great importance for water birds 15 Commercial fish yield i e the two endemic trout species has dropped significantly over the past decades both in North Macedonia and in Albania The most probable reason is overfishing and possibly destruction of spawning grounds Pollution may also be a factor 50 Although there are regulations regarding fishing practice e g minimal mesh size and only a limited number of licensed fishermen these rules are always not obeyed as a result of the high market value of the endemic trout As a reaction to the situation a seven year moratorium on fishing Ohrid trout was imposed from 2004 to help the population recover and to allow scientists collect further data Nonetheless even though thorough assessment of fish stocks has not been conducted since the 1990s 17 and trout populations are still believed to be in decline 50 fishing with quotas was restarted in 2012 under the auspices of a concessionaire 26 More data is required to determine whether these current fishing levels are sustainable 25 and illegal fishing particularly on the Albanian side of the lake 26 remains a problem While most of the endemic fish species are non migratory the European eel spawns in the distant Sargasso Sea while its offspring return to the lake Unfortunately as in many European lakes it is very unlikely today that eels can reach Lake Ohrid naturally and return to the Sargasso Sea as a result of several hydropower dams on the Black Drin and the Drin River both in North Macedonia and Albania As a result eel found in Lake Ohrid are stocked populations 15 nbsp Pogradec along Lake OhridGiven the population growth over the past 50 years a particular concern is the potential eutrophication of currently oligotrophic Lake Ohrid from increased pollution Indeed sediment cores show a 3 5 fold increase in phosphorus concentration over the past century On the one hand shifts from endemic to common European species which are better adapted to higher nutrient conditions have already been observed close to polluted inflows On the other hand higher nutrient levels have reduced the water transparency as well as the oxygen availability in the deep water and at the lake bottom two properties which are requisite for the endemic flora and fauna Still the lake is in a comparably good state at the moment However it may take more than a decade to see the effects of today s pollution level in the lake because of its long water residence time Moreover it was shown that the negative effects from eutrophication would be significantly amplified by global warming Although there is time to react computer simulations indicate that at least a 50 reduction in phosphorus input must be reached to keep the deep water oxygenated for the next 50 years at predicted atmospheric warming This aim could be reached by controlling household wastewater which is by far the biggest phosphorus source at the moment First steps in that direction have been taken by extending and improving the existing sewage system in North Macedonia in the framework of a GEF Global Environment Facility program The most important next task would be a solution for three remaining severely polluted tributaries one in North Macedonia and two in Albania 14 15 Declaration on the Protection of the Lake Ohrid Ecosystem editOn 3 May 2018 the Society of Wetland Scientists released the Declaration on the Protection of the Lake Ohrid Ecosystem which was passed unanimously by 45 attending members at its 13th annual Europe meeting 51 Urging Macedonian authorities to substantially enhance protection of Lake Ohrid the declaration outlines the unique significance of the interconnected Ohrid Prespa lake system both for its biodiversity and relevance to research on climate and evolution and recommends measures for future management including revitalization and enlargement of wetland areas pollution control and a re orientation of tourism policy 52 It further describes the critical importance of the last intact marsh on the Lake Ohrid shore Studenchishte Marsh in terms of its species composition and ecosystem services such as water quality improvement carbon storage and flood retention among others 52 Namesakes editLake Ohrid is also the namesake of Ohrid Lacus a hydrocarbon lake on the Saturnian moon Titan It is composed of liquid methane and ethane 53 and is located 71 8 N 221 9 W on Titan s globe See also editTourism in North Macedonia Tourism in Albania River Sateska Studenciste MarshPortals nbsp Europe nbsp North MacedoniaReferences edit a b Lake Ohrid Ramsar Sites Information Service Retrieved 13 May 2021 Lake Ohrid Invest in Macedonia Agency for Foreign Investments of the Republic of Macedonia InvestInMacedonia com Archived from the original on 14 September 2008 Retrieved 3 June 2017 One of Titan lakes to be named Ohrid Lacus MIA com mk Retrieved 3 June 2017 Single View News United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization www UNESCO org Retrieved 3 June 2017 a b Ministry of Environment and Physical Planning 2021 Ramsar Information Sheet Lake Ohrid Ramsar Secretariat Gland Switzerland Hoffmann et al 2010 Evolution of ancient Lake Ohrid a tectonic perspective Biogeosciences 7 3377 3386 www biogeosciences net 7 3377 2010 doi 10 5194 bg 7 3377 2010 a b c Albrecht Christian and Wilke Thomas Ancient Lake Ohrid biodiversity and evolution in Patterns and Processes of Speciation in Ancient Lakes Developments in Hydrobiology Springer Netherlands 2009 pp 103 to 140 ISBN 978 1 4020 9582 5 doi 10 1007 978 1 4020 9582 5 9 Korovchinsky Nikolai M Petkovski Trajan K 1 April 2014 The ancient Balkan lakes harbor a new endemic species of Diaphanosoma Fischer 1850 Crustacea Branchiopoda Cladocera Zootaxa 3784 5 Magnolia Press 539 549 doi 10 11646 zootaxa 3784 5 3 PMID 24872071 Hoffman et al 2010 a b Z Spirkovski Z Krstanovski L Selfo M Sanxhaku V I Puka The Monitoring Programme of the Lake Ohrid Conservation Project in Transboundary Water Resources in the Balkans Initiating a Sustainable Co Operative Network ed Jacques Ganoulis I L Murphy Mitja Brilly Springer 2000 a b A Matzinger Z Spirkovski S Patceva A Wuest Sensitivity of ancient Lake Ohrid to local anthropogenic impacts and global warming Journal of Great Lakes Research 2006 32 158 179 A Matzinger M Jordanoski E Veljanoska Sarafiloska M Sturm B Muller A Wuest Is Lake Prespa jeopardizing the ecosystem of ancient Lake Ohrid Hydrobiologia 2006 553 89 109 S D Hadzisce The mixo phenomenon of Lake Ohrid in the course of the years 1941 42 1964 65 in German Proceedings of the International Association of Theoretical and Applied Limnology 1966 16 134 138 a b c A Matzinger M Schmid E Veljanoska Sarafiloska S Patceva D Guseska B Wagner B Muller M Sturm A Wuest Matzinger Andreas Schmid Martin Veljanoska Sarafiloska Elizabeta Patceva Suzana Guseska Dafina Wagner Bernd Muller Beat Sturm Michael Wuest Alfred 2007 Eutrophication of ancient Lake Ohrid Global warming amplifies detrimental effects of increased nutrient inputs PDF Limnology and Oceanography 52 1 338 353 Bibcode 2007LimOc 52 338M doi 10 4319 lo 2007 52 1 0338 S2CID 83496931 Archived from the original PDF on 2007 07 13 a b c d M Watzin V Puka T B Naumoski eds Lake Ohrid and its watershed state of the environment report Lake Ohrid Conservation Project Tirana Albania and Ohrid Macedonia a b c d e Apostolova N et al 2016 Studenchishte Marsh as an Integral Part of Ancient Lake Ohrid Current Status and Need for Protection Wetland Science amp Practice 33 2 35 45 a b Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Internationale Zusammenarbeit 2015 I nitial Characterisation of Lakes Prespa Ohrid and Shodra Skadar Implementing the EU Water Framework Directive in South Eastern Europe Archived 2018 03 25 at the Wayback Machine Dr Thomas Wilke and Dr Christian Albrecht 31 August 2015 Lake Ohrid A Paradise in Peril Fokus Archived from the original on 2015 10 17 Retrieved 25 March 2018 Spirovska M et al 2012 Blato 13 02 2012 20 20lektorirano final pdf Integrated Study on the State of the Remains of Studenchishte Marsh and Measures for its Revitalization permanent dead link Dekons Ema Drustvo za ekoloshki consulting Macedonian language Pearce Fred 18 December 2015 Europe s oldest lake faces destruction to make way for tourists New Scientist Retrieved 25 March 2018 Declaration on Preserving the World Natural and Cultural Heritage of the Ohrid Region ohridsos org 15 April 2015 Retrieved 25 March 2018 Society of Wetland Scientists 2015 Letter to Mr Nikola Bakraceski Mayor of the City of Ohrid Archived 2017 04 04 at the Wayback Machine Dr Borka Kovachevic 2015 Draft Report on the Strategic Environmental Assessment for Changes and Additions to the General Urban Plan for Ohrid From the 60th Session of the Government of the Republic of Macedonia Government of the Republic of Macedonia 20 March 2018 Retrieved 25 March 2018 a b International Union for the Conservation of Nature IUCN 2017 Natural and Cultural Heritage of the Ohrid region 2017 Conservation Outlook Assessment Gland Switzerland a b c d World Heritage Centre ICOMOS and IUCN 2017 Reactive Monitoring Mission Report Natural and Cultural Heritage of the Ohrid Region Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia World Heritage Centre Paris France a b c Hauffe T Albrecht C Schreiber K Birkhofer K Trajanovski S Wilke T 2011 Spatially explicit analysis of gastropod biodiversity in ancient Lake Ohrid Biogeosciences 8 1 175 188 Bibcode 2011BGeo 8 175H doi 10 5194 bg 8 175 2011 a b S Stankovic The Balkan Lake Ohrid and its living world Monographiae Biologicae Vol IX Uitgeverij Dr W Junk Den Haag Netherlands 1960 H Salemaa Lake Ohrid in Speciation in Ancient Lakes eds K Martens B Goddeeris G Coulter Archiv fur Hydrobiologie Advances in Limnology 1994 44 55 64 Sell J Spirkovski Z 2004 Mitochondrial DNA differentiation between two forms of trout Salmo letnica endemic to the Balkan Lake Ohrid reflects their reproductive isolation Molecular Ecology 13 12 3633 3644 doi 10 1111 j 1365 294x 2004 02362 x PMID 15548279 S2CID 24961975 a b Talevski Milosevic Maric Petrovic Talevska Talevska 2009 Biodiversity of Ichtyofauna from Lake Prespa Lake Ohrid and Lake Skadar Biotechnology amp Biotechnological Equipment 23 2 400 404 doi 10 1080 13102818 2009 10818449 S2CID 84541133 permanent dead link M R Frogley R C Preece A faunistic review of the modern and fossil molluscan fauna from Lake Pamvotis Ioannina an ancient lake in NW Greece implications for endemism in the Balkans in Balkan Biodiversity Pattern and Process in the European Hotspot eds Huw I Griffiths Jane M Reed Boris Krystufek Springer 2004 Segers H and Martens K editors 2005 The Diversity of Aquatic Ecosystems p 46 Developments in Hydrobiology Aquatic Biodiversity ISBN 1 4020 3745 7 Lake Ohrid BirdLife Data Zone BirdLife International 2021 Retrieved 10 March 2021 Lake Ohrid and surrounding area BirdLife Data Zone BirdLife International 2021 Retrieved 10 March 2021 Kapka Kassabova To the Lake a Balkan Journey of War and Peace Granta 2020 UNESCO World Heritage Committee 1979 Report of the Rapporteur on the Third Session of the World Heritage Committee a b c World Heritage Centre World Heritage List Natural and Cultural Heritage of the Ohrid Region Retrieved 16 June 2019 World Heritage Committee 2017 Decision 41 COM 7B 34 World Heritage Centre 2019 United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization Convention Concerning the World Cultural and Natural Heritage World Heritage Committee Forty third Session Baku Azerbaijan 30 June 10 July 2019 Item 7B of the Provisional Agenda State of conservation of properties inscribed on the World Heritage List IUCN 7 June 2019 IUCN advises in danger status for three World Heritage sites Retrieved 16 June 2019 SCOPSCO Scientific Collaboration On Past Speciation Conditions in Lake Ohrid University of Cologne 5 October 2015 Retrieved 27 June 2019 Lorenschat Julia amp Schwalb Antje 2013 Autecology of the extant ostracod fauna of Lake Ohrid and adjacent waters a key to paleoenvironmental reconstruction Belgian Journal of Zoology Vol 143 Issue 1 p42 68 27 T Hauffe C Albrecht K Schreiber K Birkhofer S Trajanovski and T Wilke 2011 Spatially explicit analysis of gastropod biodiversity in ancient Lake Ohrid Biogeosciences 8 175 188 Wagner B et al 2017 The environmental and evolutionary history of Lake Ohrid FYROM Albania Biogeosciences 14 2033 2054 doi 10 5194 bg 14 2033 2017 6 4 Million Euros for research into the birth of agriculture in Europe Universitat Bern 23 October 2018 Retrieved 27 June 2019 a b Sadori L et al 2016 Pollen based paleoenvironmental and paleoclimatic change at Lake Ohrid south eastern Europe during the past 500 ka Biogeosciences 13 5 1423 1437 Bibcode 2016BGeo 13 1423S doi 10 5194 bg 13 1423 2016 Species In Ancient Lakes SIAL 2018 SIAL 8 Conference Program and Abstracts Justus Liebig University Giessen Germany and Mbarara University of Science and Technology Uganda Dosseto Anthony Francke Alex 31 May 2019 Trees the ancient Macedonians and the world s first environmental disaster The Conversation Retrieved 27 June 2019 a b Jordanova Maja Rebok Katerina Rocha Eduardo 2016 Liver pathology of female Ohrid trout Salmo letnica kar from the eastern coast of lake ohrid Baseline data suggesting the presence of a pollution gradient Turkish Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 16 2 doi 10 4194 1303 2712 v16 2 03 The Declaration on the Protection of the Lake Ohrid Ecosystem www ohridsos org 10 May 2018 Retrieved 28 May 2018 a b Society of Wetland Scientists 2018 The Declaration on The Protection of the Lake Ohrid Ecosystem Available 28 5 2018 via http www sws org images chapters europe Declaration pdf Coustenis A Taylor F W 21 July 2008 Titan Exploring an Earthlike World World Scientific pp 154 155 ISBN 978 981 281 161 5 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lake Ohrid Ohrid Municipality Official website for Info Places to visit and reservations in Ohrid Macedonia Tourism portal Ohrid Information portal Struga Tourism portal Pogradec Travel Guide LakeNet Profile Ohrid SOS Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lake Ohrid amp oldid 1193388300, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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