We studied the physicochemical and biological characteristics of the Dombrovska pit lake in Ukraine. The lake formed in an abandoned opencast potassium salt mine and is one of the most saline inland water bodies in the world. It is 85 m deep (November 2015) and an annual inflow of about 2 Mm 3 of water. The lake has two distinct layers. The mesohaline surface (0-5 m) layer is well oxygenated and slightly alkaline (pH = 7.5-8.8). Its mineralization, expressed as dry mass, was 50-134 g dm − 3 , and its electrical conductivity (EC) was 58-134 mS cm − 1 . The underlying layer consists of hypersaline water with low amounts of dissolved oxygen, a neutral pH (6.7-7.4), high mineralization (179-420 g dm − 3 ), high EC (169-215 mS cm − 1 ), and higher concentrations of major anions and cations (except Ca 2+ ) and nutrients than the overlying water. The vertical relationship between major ions and metals and the future salinity of the lake are discussed. In terms of zooplankton, in July we found living specimens of the rotifer Brachionus plicatilis and the ciliates Paradileptus elephantinus and Tindinnidium sp. as well as dead rotifers, cladocerans, and copepods (in total, 19 species), but only live B. plicatilis and 9 dead species in November. In the littoral part of the pit lake, we found the diatoms Nitzschia pusilla and some Halamphora species (H. borealis, H. tenerrima, H. acutiuscula), which favour highly saline waters.
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