Breeser See

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Breeser See
Breeser see kanzelblick.jpg
View from the observation pulpit on the east bank
Geographical location Rostock district
Tributaries Bresenitz , Rotbek, several trenches
Drain Bresenitz to Suckwitz Lake
Data
Coordinates 53 ° 40 ′ 56 "  N , 12 ° 7 ′ 31"  E Coordinates: 53 ° 40 ′ 56 "  N , 12 ° 7 ′ 31"  E
Breeser See (Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania)
Breeser See
Altitude above sea level 40.4  m above sea level NHN
surface 37 ha
Maximum depth 1.5 m
Template: Infobox Lake / Maintenance / EVIDENCE AREA Template: Infobox Lake / Maintenance / EVIDENCE MAX DEPTH

The Breeser See (also: Breesensee or Breesener See ) is located in the Sternberg lake landscape east of Lohmen in the municipality of Zehna in the Rostock district in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania . Not far from the east bank is the small town of Klein Breesen. The shallow water lake is a maximum of 950 meters long and 650 meters wide. The wedge-shaped water tapers to the south. It is located in a swampy landscape, the area around the lake has been a nature reserve since 1974 . Due to this nature of the shore, the lake is hardly accessible. In the south, the Bresenitz flows through the lake and then flows into the Suckwitzer See in the southwest . The spring lake is fed by calcareous groundwater.

The Breeser See goes back to a dead ice shape that was formed during the last Vistula ice age. Extensive lime muds were deposited.

After the lake level fell in the 19th century, the edge areas were used as grassland and peat was cut. The areas around the lake were hardly used in the GDR era. From the 1970s, the condition of the clear water lake, which had been oligotrophic up to then, deteriorated due to nutrient inputs. Digested sludge was deposited. Only from 1989 there were clear water phases again.

For centuries people have fished in the lake with fish traps and draw nets .

See also

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Ministry of Environment Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania (ed.): Breeser See 105. In: The nature reserves in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. Demmler-Verlag, Schwerin 2003, ISBN 3-91-015052-7 , pp. 530f.