The Mercury News

Invasive shrimp trouble Lake Tahoe.

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RENO, NEV. » A new report on the progress of efforts to protect Lake Tahoe says removing an invasive shrimp from the alpine waters could offset a decline in clarity while experts grapple with other threats exacerbate­d by global warming.

Introduced to the lake in the 1960s, Mysis shrimp are driving out native zooplankto­n that keep the water clear by consuming algae and other small particles.

In recent years, researcher­s have noticed that removing the shrimp from the lake’s west shore near Emerald Bay resulted in dramatic improvemen­ts in clarity. Now they want to expand removal efforts across the lake to help revive water-cleaning zooplankto­n.

“Lots of things are going to happen here on account of climate change,” said Geoffrey Schladow, director of the Tahoe Environmen­tal Research Center.

“With all those things happening I strongly believe having the native zooplankto­n will keep the lake clear,” he told the Reno Gazette Journal.

The findings on Mysis shrimp were a bright spot in the center’s annual State of the Lake report that documents progress and setbacks in the effort to preserve the largest alpine lake in North America, which attracts tens of millions of visitors to the Tahoe Basin on the California-Nevada border.

The report forecasts greater challenges based largely on the fact that global warming is driving up temperatur­es in the basin.

The 2019 report cites recent work by the Tahoe Conservanc­y suggesting that, depending on the severity of global warming, the average temperatur­e in the basin could increase by about 4 to 9 degrees by 2100. That’s on top of the 4.4-degree rise in the average daily minimum temperatur­e recorded over the last 107 years.

“We’re getting used to that it is on average getting warmer most years, and that is going to keep happening,” Schladow said. “We are trying to do our best to live with it.”

For example, the surface water temperatur­e in Lake Tahoe has been on the rise since at least 1968, when regular measuremen­ts began.

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 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Lilyana Allen, of Guam, uses a telescope to view Lake Tahoe from an observatio­n platform.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Lilyana Allen, of Guam, uses a telescope to view Lake Tahoe from an observatio­n platform.

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