Late last week, Wisconsin Sea Grant sponsored a panel about the effect of phosphorus flowing off surrounding land and into waterways. An excess of the nutrient can lead to the growth of a bacteria known as cyanobacteria, also called blue-green algae.  

Blue-green algae blooms are potentially fatal to pets, fish and other wildlife. They can also consume all the oxygen in a waterbody, destroying the biodiversity of an ecosystem that may have formerly teemed with plants, fish, frogs and mussels.

For people, there is some concern that just being near affected water could cause neurological conditions, such as ALS, said one of the panelists, Dan Egan. “You don’t want toxic blue-green algae in your life, in your neighborhood. You don’t want it anywhere.”

More than 1,500 people attended the event held at the University of Wisconsin—Madison  Memorial Union Terrace on the shore of Lake Mendota, which Egan has called “ground zero” due to frequent and toxic blue-green algal blooms and its status as a what’s been termed the most studied lake in the world because the Center for Limnology is located along it. UW—Madison is where the field of American limnology began in the 1800s.

Last spring, Egan published “The Devil’s Element: Phosphorus and a World Out of Balance,” which outlines the world’s mining, processing and use of phosphorus. It also explains the element’s paradox—phosphorus brings agricultural plenty but can lead to devastation in waterways.

Four people sitting on a stage with a lake behind them.

A panel hosted by entertainer Charlie Berens brought together experts and a journalist to discuss water qualty.

Jake Vander Zanden, an expert on freshwater lakes and director of the Center for Limnology, and Randy Jackson, a professor from the university’s Department of Agronomy who spoke about agriculture’s role in nutrient loading, rounded out the panel.

The conversation among the trio was moderated by popular entertainer Charlie Berens, known for his humorous takes on Wisconsin norms, speech and food choices as host of the Manitowoc Minute newscast and through his bestselling book, “The Midwest Survival Guide.”

For this event, though, Berens used his notoriety and established platform—his Cripescast podcast, which explores Midwestern themes and people and where the recorded panel discussion from late August will ultimately be archived—to call attention to this important environmental topic.

Egan noted that phosphorus is in every single cell on Earth. It doesn’t go away and since time immemorial has been part of a cycle that allowed a trickle of phosphorus into the world. However, he noted, “We’ve turned that cycle into a straight line and that line runs into the water” when phosphorus in the form of fertilizer is applied to farm fields, golf courses and lawns.

“Phosphorus puts food on our table. It’s existed forever, but in the last 120 years we’ve figured out how to turn a slow trickle of this essential nutrient into a gusher.” Egan continued, “We are also burning through it at such a pace that it’s getting into the water, and when it gets into the water, it’s not gonna grow a kernel of corn or a soybean, it’s gonna grow algae. And too often it’s toxic algae.”

Vander Zanden highlighted other contributors, such as urban runoff. He used the Madison, Wisconsin, location as his demonstration case: Lake Mendota receives all the stormwater runoff from streets. “It’s important for you all to know that that water that runs off is not treated. It goes directly to the lake. It’s phosphorus that comes off, also oils and metals and all sorts of other pollutants.

“Another is sewage treatment effluents. That’s not a huge source in the grand scheme of things. And then there are other sources as well, industrial sources, factories and so on; those are actually minor. So, the Clean Water Act from 1972 addressed these sources quite nicely. The amount of phosphorus coming from those types has gone down a lot, and now what we are left with is agricultural and urban runoff from the landscape,” he said.

Agriculturally targeted solutions discussed included:

  • Subsidizing not cropland but grassland that holds on to phosphorus and carbon and promoting biodiversity. This involves planting cover crops such as switchgrass and following no-till practices.
  • Adopting agricultural practices such as avoiding manure spreading if the ground is frozen or if rain is predicted.
  • Using alum treatments. Alum is a chemical that binds phosphorus. There are examples from around the world where alum was added to polluted waters. Vander Zanden said, “It sort of sucks up the phosphorus and sort of holds it. That’s a technical solution that may or may not be financially viable here.”
Close-up of four black and white cows.

Photo by Althea Dotzour/ UW–Madison

The speakers also said the collective use of these solutions, holistically, could be a good approach to make progress.

Keying off that holistic approach, Jackson stressed the actors in the phosphorus-use cycle are “not nefarious. They are just reacting to the system we have set up.”

He offered a rallying cry, “The system only changes when we come together as a community and embrace the idea of collective action. This is how a lot of big things have happened in the world. Civil rights is an example of this. People come together in communities and engage in collective action so that the powers actually have to listen.”

Egan put a Badger State spin on it, “We have a license plate that shows a barn and water. Both are things that define this great state and should not be working at cross purposes. Often, they are. I think everybody values what’s on the right side, the barn. Everybody eats…but everybody also needs water, and you know, there’s no reason why we can’t have both.”

The post Sea Grant-hosted water quality panel discussed solutions on phosphorus use first appeared on Wisconsin Sea Grant.

Original Article

News Releases | Wisconsin Sea Grant

News Releases | Wisconsin Sea Grant

https://www.seagrant.wisc.edu/news/sea-grant-hosted-water-quality-panel-discussed-solutions-on-phosphorus-use/

Moira Harrington

In a concise and informative new video released today, Wisconsin Sea Grant illuminates the varied coregonines, commonly known as cisco, which have pulsed through Great Lakes waters for 12,000 years. Now, due to human influences, the fork-tailed fish are diminished in number and range, and display less diverse forms. They are the subject of a research project by a team at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

“The ciscoes were some of the most numerous and populous fish in the Great Lakes,” said Ben Martin, Ph.D. student working with lead researcher Jake Vander Zanden who is the chair and director of the Center for Limnology. Martin noted ciscos’ importance as a food source for apex predators, both in the past and present-day.

To learn the future of the species, Vander Zanden is looking toward the past—exploring the fish found in dozens and dozens of jars that the video shows on rolling storage shelves housed at a zoology museum on the Madison campus.

“We go to these museum specimens. We take a tiny tissue sample. We take these chemical measurements, and we make these inferences about the diet and feeding of these species,” Vander Zanden said.

Jake Vander Zanden samples a museum specimen of a cisco to unlock details of the past Great Lakes food web. Photo by Bonnie Willison.

These fish that have been lifeless for 100 years will now breathe new life into an understanding of that past food web. Beyond analysis based on archived fish, samples from across the Great Lakes Basin, many from a collection at the University of Michigan in addition to the UW-Madison ones, Martin is assessing modern-day cisco morphometrics, that is, their physical diversity.  

Pairing both types of knowledge contributes to ecological restoration. Vander Zanden said there is interest in bringing back ciscoes that feed higher predators. “We want to maximize our understanding of the past and hopefully use that as a guide (for restoration) moving forward.”

Sea Grant Videographer Bonnie Willison said, “As Jake, Ben and collaborators altered their research agenda during the pandemic, I had to alter the way I shoot video. We did virtual interviews and distanced filming to pull this off.”

She continued, “I was very intrigued by the problem of studying fish that don’t exist in the lakes anymore. I’m happy to profile this important study that will shed light on how to make positive changes in the lakes as they exist now.”

Martin and Vander Zanden stressed the value of collaboration on this project and expressed appreciation for colleagues at the U.S. Geological Survey, Great Lakes Fisheries Commission, University of Wyoming and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

The post New video illuminates how ancestral and present-day ciscoes provide understanding of the Great Lakes food web first appeared on Wisconsin Sea Grant.

Original Article

News Releases – Wisconsin Sea Grant

News Releases – Wisconsin Sea Grant

https://www.seagrant.wisc.edu/news/new-video-illuminates-how-ancestral-and-present-day-ciscoes-provide-understanding-of-the-great-lakes-food-web/

Moira Harrington