The Oakland Press

Moderate algae bloom forecast for Lake Erie this summer

- By John Flesher

TRAVERSE CITY » Lake Erie’s annual blob of pea-green algae is expected to be smaller this summer than a year ago following a relatively dry spring, but that doesn’t necessaril­y reflect significan­t improvemen­t toward reducing the nutrient pollution that causes it, scientists said Thursday.

A forecast released by the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion predicts the algae bloom on the shallowest of the Great Lakes will reach 4.5 on its severity index — a “moderate” reading. That’s lower than last year’s 7.3 rating but higher than the 3.8 measured in 2018.

Anything above 5 indicates a severe problem. The measuremen­ts indicate the bloom’s biomass — the amount of algae in the water for an extended period.

The largest occurred in 2011, which had a severity index of 10, and in 2015, when it hit 10.5.

The drop-off this year is expected because of a decrease in spring rainfall from 2019, NOAA oceanograp­her Rick Stumpf said. Spring storms can wash newly applied manure and chemical fertilizer­s that feed the algae into the lake and its tributary streams and rivers — particular­ly the Maumee River on the lake’s western side.

“A smaller bloom forecast for Lake Erie and the surroundin­g coastal communitie­s is encouragin­g, but we cannot be complacent,” said Nicole LeBoeuf, acting director of NOAA’s National Ocean Service.

Lake Erie’s blooms consist of blue-green algae or cyanobacte­ria, which can produce a liver toxin called microcysti­n that is harmful to humans and animals. The level of toxicity at a given time isn’t connected to the size of the bloom, because toxins in a larger mass may be less concentrat­ed than in a smaller one.

NOAA and other U.S. and Canadian agencies have set a goal of reducing the Lake Erie bloom to a 3 on the index, which was last seen in 2012.

Ohio, Michigan and the

Canadian province of Ontario also have pledged to reduce runoff of phosphorus — a nutrient that feeds the blooms — by 40% by 2025 from the 2015 amount.

But measuremen­ts in the Maumee River and other key tributarie­s have shown no trend toward lower phosphorus inputs to the lake since the early 2000s, said Laura Johnson, director of the National Center for Water Quality Research at Heidelberg University in Ohio.

About 325 tons of the type of phosphorus that nourishes algae is expected to flow into the lake’s central and western basins this year, Stumpf said. That total would need to be 30% lower to meet the reduction goal.

“We cannot cross our fingers and hope that drier weather will keep us safe,” said Don Scavia, a professor emeritus at the University of Michigan and a member of the forecast team.

“These blooms are driven by diffuse phosphorus sources from the agricultur­ally dominated Maumee River watershed,” Scavia said. “Until the phosphorus inputs are reduced significan­tly and consistent­ly so that only the mildest blooms occur, the people, the ecosystem and the economy of this region are being threatened.”

In addition to endangerin­g health, algae blooms can boost water treatment costs and harm tourism as fewer people visit the lake for fishing and swimming.

Cyanobacte­ria, or bluegreen algae, began growing in the lake last week, NOAA said. A visible bloom is expect to begin showing up in mid to late July.

“Much of the lake will be fine most of the time,” Stumpf said, but areas with high concentrat­ions of algae will have a “strong risk of scum” in the water when winds are calm.

Ohio and Michigan have encouraged farmers to make greater use of best-management practices such as planting off-season cover crops and buffer strips between croplands and streams to prevent runoff. Applying fertilizer in ways that prevent it from being washed away can reduce levels of the type of phosphorus that feeds harmful algae, Johnson said.

 ?? ANDY MORRISON — THE BLADE VIA AP, FILE ?? In this Sept. 20, 2017 file photo, a catfish appears on the shoreline in the algae-filled waters at the end of 113th Street in the Point Place section of North Toledo, Ohio. The blob of pea-green algae that covers parts of Lake Erie is expected to be smaller in the summer of 2020 than a year ago. That’s according to the federal National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, which released its annual forecast Thursday.
ANDY MORRISON — THE BLADE VIA AP, FILE In this Sept. 20, 2017 file photo, a catfish appears on the shoreline in the algae-filled waters at the end of 113th Street in the Point Place section of North Toledo, Ohio. The blob of pea-green algae that covers parts of Lake Erie is expected to be smaller in the summer of 2020 than a year ago. That’s according to the federal National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, which released its annual forecast Thursday.

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