“…Since ancient times, lakes are closely related with human survival and development and play an irreplaceable role in runoff regulation, agricultural irrigation, transportation, urban and rural water supply, aquaculture, and maintaining ecological balance (Johnson et al, 2001). The lake evolution here is mainly affected by both natural factors (crustal movement, sediment deposition, and climate change) (Shadkam et al, 2016) and human activity (reclaiming farmland from lakes, urban expansion, and construction of large-scale water conservancy projects) (Yao et al, 2006;Wei et al, 2005a). Along with the population growth and the development of productive forces, the effects of human intervention on nature and ecological environment increased, which accelerated the evolution of lakes (Xiao et al, 2012).…”