Paul Lake Provincial Park

Paul Lake Provincial Park is a provincial park in British Columbia, Canada, located southwest of Heffley Lake[1] and to the northeast of the city of Kamloops.

Paul Lake
Paul Lake Provincial Park
LocationBritish Columbia
Basin countriesCanada
Max. length6.5 kilometres (4.0 mi)
Max. depth45 metres (148 ft)
Surface elevation770 metres (2,530 ft)

The lake is believed to be named for Jean Baptiste Lolo, as is nearby Mount Lolo, who was also known as St. Paul, or Chief St. Paul, and served as an interpreter at Fort Kamloops and became regarded as a chief by the local Secwepemc people, though of Iroquois and French Canadian origin.[2]

Originally without fish, Paul Lake was stocked with Rainbow trout, which thrived. Subsequent inadvertent introduction of Redside shiners, Richardsonius balteatus initiated a sequence of competition for amphipods and predator-prey interactions that were studied by P.A. Larkin and his students.[3]

References

  1. "Paul Lake Park". BC Geographical Names.
  2. "Lolo, Mount". BC Geographical Names.
  3. P.A. Larkin, "Interspecific competition and population control in freshwater fish", Journal of Fish. Res. Board of Canada 13.2 1956:327-52, summarized in Peter B. Moyle and Joseph Cech Jr., Fishes: an introduction to ichthyology, 5th ed. 2004:463.


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