The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Too soon to tell

Prediction­s come out for Lake Erie algae bloom

- By Richard Payerchin rpayerchin@morningjou­rnal.com @MJ_JournalRic­k on Twitter

Lake Erie observers say it’s too soon to exactly tell what will happen if there is a harmful algal bloom in summer 2018.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion released its first Lake Erie Harmful Algal Bloom Early Season Projection on May 7; the second one came out a week later. The prediction is just that. Spring loading season runs from March 1 to July 31.

The severity of harmful algae depends on the amount of phosphorus that washes into the Western Basin of Lake Erie.

Much of the phosphorus comes from the Maumee River during the loading season, March 1, to

July 31.

“The key issue is the load of phosphorus in the spring,” said Richard P. Stumpf, oceanograp­her at the NOAA National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science i n Maryland. “The spring is from March into July. That really drives the bloom.”

For northern Ohio residents, it may feel like it has been a wet spring.

The early season project notes that precipitat­ion was average in March.

“April was wetter than average, and May is expected to be somewhat wetter than average,” according to the projection.

There was rainfall this week, but “the current outlook for June suggests drier conditions,” the report said.

As a result, “the uncertaint­y is quite large,” as of May 14.

The projection will become more accurate once the models are replaced with data.

Despite some days with cold temperatur­es on land, researcher­s have f ound no relation between the weather and the temper- How healthy is Lake Erie? We take a look at the health and popularity of Lake Erie as the summer recreation season begins. In addition to the growing algae problem, this three-part series will look at invaders such as Asian carp and also the state of recreation­al boating. ature of the lake in April and May and what happens when algae grows in July’s warmer, Stumpf said.

Central Basin green-blues

The harmful algal blooms tend to start in Lake Erie’s Western Basin, but can move east to the Central Basin, including the area off Lorain, Stumpf said.

Much of the movement depends on the winds creating currents and wave action in the water, he said.

“You’re at risk mostly if we get to a large bloom and westerly winds,” pushing the algae off Huron, Vermilion and Lorain, Stumpf said.

“It very much is driven by which way the wind is blowing,” he said.

In September 2011, there was a large bloom that spread east of Cleveland,

STAYING SAFE WITH ALGAE

The Ohio Department of Health and Ohio Sea Grant have multiple online resources dedicated to the science and health effects of potential harmful algal blooms in Lake Erie. If there is harmful algae toxins in the water, the best advice to stay out of it and don’t drink it. “Keep your dog out of the water,” said Richard P. Stumpf, oceanograp­her at the NOAA National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science in Maryland. “As well as, if there’s scum, keep you, your children and your pets out of the water.”

but in September 2015, the large bloom spread more into the center of the lake toward Canada, Stumpf said.

“The bloom does not cover the whole lake,” he said.

Effects in Lorain

While the threat of toxic algae has not been huge for Lorain, local officials say they do pay attention to the forecasts.

Since testing for the toxins began in 2011, the Lorain Water Treatment Plant logged just one instance of the toxin in the raw water in 2015.

There was no amount de- Anyone who comes into contact with water contaminat­ed with blue-green algae should rinse it off, Stumpf said. The issue can be particular­ly dangerous for dogs because they could ingest enough toxin to be fatal, he said. Northern Ohio residents are familiar with beach water testing for E. coli bacteria, said Bryan Goldthorpe, manager of Lorain’s Lakeview Park for Lorain County Metro Parks. That testing will start at Lakeview Park on May 21, Goldthorpe said.

tectable in the treated water, said Paul Wilson, director of utilities for the city of Lorain.

The water plant has a sensor that can monitor for the toxin and other water conditions as the plant sucks in raw water from Lake Erie, Wilson said.

In 2016, the Ohio Environmen­tal Protection Agency also mandated water treatment plants to create plans to deal with algae toxins in the water, he said.

If the toxin was in the raw water at high levels and detected in the treated water, the city would warn residents not to drink it, like what happened in Toledo in summer 2014, Wilson said.

“If there was a big enough bloom and it would overtake the plant, that’s always a possibilit­y,” he said. “But I think we have a pretty good handle on all the possibilit­ies.”

At Lakeview Park, swim- ming will be forbidden if harmful algae is suspected off the shore, said Bryan Goldthorpe, park manager for Lorain County Metro Parks.

In the last few years, that has happened just once, Goldthorpe said.

“If I suspect it, I’m not letting people in the water,” he said. “I, as a beach manager, am not taking chances with the public’s health.”

The wave action off Lakeview Park tends to help break up the algae and keep water flowing.

Sandusky Bay, where wave action can be more restricted, tends to have a larger algae problem than the area off Lorain, Goldthorpe said.

“April was wetter than average, and May is expected to be somewhat wetter than average,” according to the projection.

 ?? ANDY MORRISON — THE BLADE VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A catfish appears on the shoreline in the algae-filled waters of North Toledo in 2017.
ANDY MORRISON — THE BLADE VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A catfish appears on the shoreline in the algae-filled waters of North Toledo in 2017.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States