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Étang de Thau

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(Redirected from Thau lagoon) Lake on the south coast of France
Étang de Thau
Thau Lagoon
View from Sète
Location of lake in FranceLocation of lake in FranceÉtang de Thau
LocationLanguedoc-Roussillon
Coordinates43°24′36″N 3°37′27″E / 43.41000°N 3.62417°E / 43.41000; 3.62417
Typelagoon
Basin countriesFrance
Max. length21 km (13 mi)
Max. width8 km (5.0 mi)
Surface area7,012 ha (17,330 acres)
Average depth4 m (13 ft)
Max. depth30 m (98 ft)
Surface elevation0 m (0 ft)
SettlementsMarseillan, Mèze, Bouzigues, Balaruc-les-Bains, Sète

The Étang de Thau (French pronunciation: [etɑ̃ də to]; Occitan: Estanh de Taur) or Bassin de Thau is the largest of a string of lagoons (étangs) that stretch along the French coast from the Rhône river to the foothills of the Pyrenees and the border to Spain in the Languedoc-Roussillon. Although it has a high salinity, it is considered the third largest lake in France.

Description

The Étang de Thau seen from Sète.
The coastline between Sète and Marseillan with the Étang de Thau on the right.
The Étang de Thau during a sailing regatta.

It is about 21 kilometres (13 mi) long and 8 km wide, with an area of 7,012 hectares (27.07 sq mi). The mean depth of the lagoon is 4.5 metres (15 ft), but in the central navigation channel it can be 10 metres (33 ft) deep. Near Bouzigues is a 30 metres (98 ft) deep depression with a diameter of 100 metres (330 ft). This 'Fosse de la Vise' is the source of a hot spring that feeds the spa in Balaruc.

Its size and depth, which distinguish it from other lagoons of the region, is explained by the geomorphology of the region since the syncline formed by folding produced the corresponding anticline of the Gardiole in the north-east.

Until relatively recently, the lagoons from Marseillan to the Rhône were a continuous stretch of inland waterway. Early settlers described this as "une petite mer intérieure et tranquille" ("a small, calm, inland sea"). It provided access to, in particular, Marseillan — a fishing village that became a trade centre.

Linked now by the Canal du Rhône à Sète to the river Rhône and by the Canal du Midi to Bordeaux via Toulouse, the lagoon also has access to the Mediterranean at Sète. There is also a small canal (le canal des Allemands or the pisse-saume) that links the western end to the sea at Marseillan Plage. This canal is only suitable for small craft since both road and railway bridges restrict height.

To the east, between Balaruc and Sète, the borders of the lagoon are largely industrial. The south bank is formed by the coastal strip from Sète to Cap d'Agde. The northern side has villages dedicated to fishing and the production of shellfish. There are harbours in the towns of Marseillan, Mèze and Bouzigues, with smaller ports dedicated to shellfish on the northern shore.

There is significant variation in the rainfall in the catchment basin for the lagoon, both seasonally and between years. The annual precipitation can range from 200 to 1,000 mm per year. As a result, the water temperature and salinity have extensive ranges. Water temperature ranges from 3 °C to 29 °C, with salinities of 27 to 40 psu. The salinity changes during the year with lows from February to June and peaks in July to January.

Administration

Located between the towns of Sète and Marseillan in the Hérault département, the Étang de Thau is shared administratively by the communes of (running clockwise), Balaruc-le-Vieux, Balaruc-les-Bains, Frontignan, Sète, Marseillan, Mèze, Loupian and Bouzigues.

Economy and natural resources

As the lagoon is open to the sea, it has fish such as the gilt-head bream (dorade), the meagre (maigre, a kind of croaker) and the sea bass. The lagoon produces approximately 200 kg/ha/year of fish. However, the shellfish industry is more economically important. Eighteen varieties of shellfish are taken from the lagoon - the most important being oysters. 750 producers farm 2,750 oyster tables and take some 13,000 tonnes annually. This provides for about 8.5% of France's consumption. Oysters from the Étang de Thau are marketed under the name huîtres de Bouzigues (Bouzigues oysters) after the village of Bouzigues where oyster production started. They are a cupped variety. Fixed with cement to ropes, the young oysters are immersed in the water until they reach a size suitable for consumption. Thau water is graded A and so shellfish can be caught and consumed within minutes. In addition to oysters, some 3,000 tonnes of mussels are produced every year.

Apart from fishing and shellfish, the Étang de Thau provides income through tourism, particularly via sailing schools.

Wildlife

Flamingos near Bouzigues

The Bassin de Thau provides a habitat for a variety of wild animals, notably birds such as herons and pink flamingos and a rich marine fauna, including bivalves (oysters and mussels), jellyfish, fish, and algae. Periodically in the spring and summer, the Thau Lagoon has algae blooms of Alexandrium catenella which sometimes reach such high levels that it results in contamination of the lagoon's bivalves with algae toxins.

Gallery

  • Étang de Thau and Sète from Mèze Étang de Thau and Sète from Mèze
  • Lido de Thau with the Étang de Thau on the left, former salt evaporation ponds on the right Lido de Thau with the Étang de Thau on the left, former salt evaporation ponds on the right
  • Sète and the Étang de Thau at dawn Sète and the Étang de Thau at dawn
  • Harbour of Mèze Harbour of Mèze
  • The Île de Thau neighbourhood and the Étang de Thau seen from the "Lido de Thau" in Sète The Île de Thau neighbourhood and the Étang de Thau seen from the "Lido de Thau" in Sète
  • Oyster production at Bouzigues Oyster production at Bouzigues
  • Canal du Midi joins Étang de Thau in Marseillan Canal du Midi joins Étang de Thau in Marseillan
  • Phare des Onglous lighthouse at the mouth of Canal du Midi Phare des Onglous lighthouse at the mouth of Canal du Midi

Notes

  1. Lesaffre, Clément (31 July 2017). "La France des records : Géant lac Léman". leparisien.fr (in French). Retrieved 4 June 2024.
  2. "Thau Lagoon (Phytoplankton & Microbial Plankton of the Mediterranean)". ICES Working Group on Phytoplankton and Microbial Ecology (WGPME) by the United States National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration. Archived from the original on 27 May 2024.
  3. ^ Laabir, Mohamed; et al. (2013). "Influence of Environmental Factors on the Paralytic Shellfish Toxin Content and Profile of Alexandrium catenella (Dinophyceae) Isolated from the Mediterranean Sea". Marine Drugs. 11 (5): 1583–160 1. doi:10.3390/md11051583. PMC 3707163. PMID 23676417.
  4. ^ Farrugio, Henri (June 2011). "France: Country Report (Mediterranean coastal lagoons management: interaction between aquaculture and capture fisheries)" (PDF). General Fisheries Commission for the Mediterranean. pp. 8–10. Archived (PDF) from the original on 8 September 2014.
  5. ^ Palmer, Henry (25 March 2011). "Thau Lagoon: seasoning's greetings". The Independent. London. Archived from the original on 8 September 2014.
  6. "Qualité des huîtres creuses Crassostrea gigas élevées dans le bassin de Thau et influence de la densité d'élevage sur la qualité" (PDF) (in French). Ifremer - Laboratoire Conchylicole de Méditerranée. September 2001.

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