Quick fix for Lake O algae woes uses prime cattle land
Thriving ranch land in the belly of the Indian Prairie Basin will soon be a pool of nutrient-bombed water as Florida looks at temporary fixes for the algae woes of Lake Okeechobee and the northern estuaries.
The Brighton Valley Project, which was approved this month by the South Florida Water Management District, will take water thick with algae-loving fertilizer and agriculture runoff, clean it, and send it into Lake Okeechobee with 70 percent less phosphorous and 35 percent less nitrogen.
Slated for 8,200 acres of privately-owned land now roamed by Angus cattle, the project will cost $11.5 million, and it will take about a year to complete.
It is the second of six planned public-private water storage and cleaning projects meant to act as quick patches to lessen nutrient levels in Lake Okeechobee and reduce discharges to the St. Lucie
and Caloosahatchee estuaries while permanent Everglades restoration projects are underway.
The Lake O discharges, which have been intermittent since June 1, are partly blamed for harmful bluegreen algae infecting the brackish estuary waterways this summer.
“We think this is a good step forward. It maintains the land, but doesn’t require you to buy the land,” said Martha Musgrove, Florida Wildlife Federation’s southern region director, during a June 12 water district meeting. “You are setting the
bar, and the bar has been high, but it’s not so high you can’t jump over it and succeed.”
In 2016, when another algae bloom slimed the Treasure Coast following water releases from Lake Okeechobee, state lawmakers set aside about $48 million for the construction of water projects that partner with private land owners in
the northern Everglades. Sixteen proposals were submitted. The Florida Department of Environmental Protection chose six to proceed.
The fifirst, which is on a former citrus grove in Martin County, began as a 413-acre pilot project in 2014 to store excess water instead of having it flflush out the St. Lucie Estuary. The Caulkins Water Farm has since grown to a 2-mile-by-3-mile reservoir that stores dirty water from the C-44 Canal with a goal of holding up to 35 billion
gallons of water every year. Plans are for the Caulkins reservoir to store the water and never discharge under normal conditions. About 18 percent evaporates, and
82 percent remains in the 10-foot deep reservoir surrounded by a 17-mile manmade berm.
“For 50 years this has been a flflourishing, terrifific ag property, a citrus grove, but like many other growers, certainly all the commercial growers in Martin County, we were hit by citrus greening and lost all of our trees,”
said Caulkins Citrus Co. President George Caulkins III, in a fall interview. “We found a way to repurpose this land ... and fifigure out a way to take lemons and make lemonade, for the citizens of Mar- tin County and the St. Lucie Estuary and the coast.”
At Brighton, which is northwest of Lake Okeechobee in Highlands County, the plan is to pull in
water from the C-41 Canal, cycle it through two treatment ponds, and send it out the C -40 Canal into Lake Okeechobee.
The land is an upland/ wetland mosaic ecosystem, which includes a variety of natural landscape that will
fifilter out nutrients over time. The $11.5 million will pay for berms, pumps and the creation of the two water-cleaning ponds that will range from one to four feet deep.
“It won’t offifficially reduce the discharges to the estuaries, but the water flflowing
into the lake will be at a far cleaner rate than today,” said Ansley Marr, the water district’ s section administrator for the Northern Everglades.
Landowner Lykes Bros.
Inc. will get an estimated $3 million per year to operate the Brighton project for 10 years.
The Lykes family has been in Florida since the 1860s
with the company now owning about 330,000 acres of ranch land and citrus groves.
Noah Handley, project manager for Lykes Brighton Valley, said the Lykes Bros. company has two other water storage and treatment projects ongoing with the state.
“We’ve been working with di ff ff ff ff ff ff e rent folks trying to come up with ideas to get projects up and running faster and economically,” he said. “We want to try and help the ecosystems downstream.”
Florida’s early flflood management program meant diverting the natural southern overflow from Lake Okeechobee by dredging canals to the coast to drain land for farms and homes. This robbed the southern Everglades of fresh water. At the north end of the
lake, the Kissimmee River was deepened and straightened, funneling rain, along with heavy loads of phosphorus and nitrogen, straight into Lake Okeechobee.
When the lake gets too high, water needs to be discharged to the Caloosahatchee and St. Lucie estuaries — a move that contributes to the growth of cyanobacteria, or blue-green algae.
“The state is doing its part to fifinish major restoration projects that will protect the estuaries long-term,” said Federico Fernandez, the water management district’s governing board chairman. “Private landowners are giving us the flflexibility needed to store and treat water in
the short-term.”
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