Community Corner

Lake Dillon Is Warming, But Its Water Quality Remains OK: Study

The reservoir supplying metro Denver's water has warmed almost 5 degrees Fahrenheit in the last 35 years.

SUMMIT COUNTY, CO – By Lars Gesing for The Colorado Independent. A new environmental study has some rare good news for stressed Colorado water managers: Lake Dillon, the Summit County reservoir that supplies water to much of the Denver metro area, has warmed almost 5 degrees Fahrenheit in the last 35 years — but the water quality has not taken a hit.

That is because the lake’s altitude, 9,000 feet, and the low average temperatures surrounding the lake serve as buffers against problems associated with climate change-induced warming that afflict many water bodies around the globe, says William Lewis, director of the University of Colorado at Boulder’s Cooperative for Research in Environmental Studies and the study’s lead author.

At lower elevations and particularly in the tropics, where temperatures are much higher than Colorado’s, warming waters lead to exploding algae populations and dropping deepwater oxygen levels. That in turn drastically decreases water quality, leading to supply shortages for millions of people around the globe.

Find out what's happening in Across Coloradofor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Lewis and his fellow researchers have collected detailed information about temperature, water quality and aquatic life in Lake Dillon since 1981. The multi-decade research was sponsored by Denver Water and the Summit Water Quality Committee.

READ MORE at The Colorado Independent

Find out what's happening in Across Coloradofor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Dillon Reservoir in Summit County, Colorado (Photo by Lars Gesing)

More from Across Colorado