By Ruth Thorton Standing together at Pierce Cedar Creek Institute near Hastings, Michigan, two students stared intently at the screen, looking for the subtle signs of the small rattlesnake they were trying to find. The eastern massasauga, Michigan’s only rattlesnake, typically hides in dense vegetation in wetlands, and conservation biologists are concerned about trampling their […]

The post Researchers use drones to find elusive Michigan rattlesnake first appeared on Great Lakes Echo.

Original Article

Great Lakes Echo

Great Lakes Echo

http://greatlakesecho.org/2024/07/31/researchers-use-drones-to-find-elusive-michigan-rattlesnake/

Elinor Epperson

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has been working to collect new mapping data on Lake Superior since 2020. This survey is part of a large effort to update the mapping of the coastal and nearshore water of the Great Lakes. Read the full story by WDIO-TV – Duluth, MN.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20240731-superior-mapping

Nichole Angell

Governor Whitmer of Michigan signed off on state funding to support an early warning system along the 80-mile Lake Huron-to-Lake Erie corridor. The program involves physical monitors at treatment plants in the region that ultimately serves half the state’s population. Read the full story by the Port Huron Times Herald.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20240731-water-monitoring-funding

Nichole Angell

Momentum for transitioning away from single use plastic is building in the Great Lakes. The Alliance for the Great Lakes is calling for implementing extended producer responsibility policies — holding producers responsible across the life cycle of their products. Read the full story by the Chicago Sun-Times.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20240731-plastic-trash

Nichole Angell

Just when Michiganders think they know all the invasive plants and bugs to watch out for, another one gets added to the list. Lesser celandine is an aquatic plant with pretty yellow flowers found heavily in mid-Michigan near streams and in forested floodplains. Read the full story by WDRG – Grand Rapids, MI.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20240731-new-invasive-mi

Nichole Angell

Ten years ago this Friday, Toledo, Ohio, residents woke up to an algae-driven water crisis that brought unwanted attention from other parts of the world and inflicted a scar on the city’s reputation. Despite knowing the cause of the crisis, similar problems remain today. Read the full story by the Toledo Blade.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20240731-erie-algal-blooms

Nichole Angell

To help better understand which of the almost 200 aquatic invasive species roaming the Great Lakes pose the greatest threat, scientists at various Michigan-based research groups ranked the top 10 species that have the greatest impact. Read the full story by WJBK – Detroit, MI.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20240731-ranked-invasives

Nichole Angell

All aboard the rolling robot! An autonomous electric bus will begin a monthlong deployment at Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore in northern Michigan as part of a grant-funded project by a self-driving software company. Read the full story by MLive.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20240731-driverless-bus

Nichole Angell

Tom Zimnicki headshot.
Tom Zimnicki, Agriculture & Restoration Policy Director

This August marks the 10-year anniversary of when residents of Toledo, Ohio awoke to urgent warnings not to drink or use their tap water. Half a million people were unable to drink their water, cook with it, or brush their teeth. The cause? Toxins from a harmful algal bloom growing in Lake Erie.

Fueled by nutrient pollution, largely from agriculture, and exacerbated by climate change, toxic algal blooms are a growing threat across America. Chronic blooms persist on Lake Erie and are now appearing on all Great Lakes – which contain 22% of the world’s supply of fresh surface water.

What can be done to stop the spread of toxic algal blooms?

One approach has been to spend government funds at both the state and federal levels on farm-level conservation practices. These initiatives aim to stem the deluge of nitrogen and phosphorous – the two main components of farm fertilizer that fuel blooms – from entering the lakes.

Despite years of work and hundreds of millions in taxpayer funds spent, that approach has largely failed. In 2015, the governors of Michigan and Ohio pledged to reduce phosphorus runoff to Lake Erie by 40% in ten years. It is widely understood by all parties with an interest in cleaning up algal blooms that we will not meet those reduction targets by a wide margin. Alliance for the Great Lakes research shows that farm conservation measures in Ohio and Michigan are woefully underfunded and that despite years of investment, adoption rates of conservation practices are still far behind where they need to be. The current approach – inadequate funding and not enough farms following best practices – is failing to protect our water.

Given the magnitude of the problem and the inadequate funding, states must prioritize and target funding to the highest priority fields and the most cost-efficient practices. In partnership with the engineers and scientists at LimnoTech, and with guidance from Michigan’s Department of Agriculture and Rural Development and Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy, we’ve developed tools aimed at improving our ability to reduce phosphorus loads from five priority subwatersheds feeding Lake Erie and ultimately Michigan’s entire portion of the Western Lake Erie Basin.

Over the past two years, we developed a two-pronged approach to aid in nutrient reduction planning in Michigan. First, we created maps that help identify possible priority fields for conservation implementation based on field characteristics in a subset of Michigan’s portion of the Western Lake Erie Basin. These maps are not intended to definitively identify fields that are losing phosphorus. Their utility exists as a starting point for outreach efforts to the agriculture community. Second, the report lays out a methodology and rationale for targeting efforts in one area over another.

Traditionally, state and federal agencies have funded conservation implementation without prioritizing locations. By identifying fields that are most at risk of losing phosphorus, and by giving the state and agencies tools to prioritize outreach efforts, we aim to make a bigger impact using the limited funds available. Our analysis also identifies the cost and acres of conservation practices necessary to meet the phosphorus targets that Michigan and Ohio agreed to in 2015.

Understanding current water quality in the subwatersheds of the Western Lake Erie Basin is critical for making informed decisions on future conservation spending. Earlier this year the Alliance, in partnership with LimnoTech and Michigan State University’s Institute of Water Research, launched a five-year water quality monitoring effort in the headwaters of the Western Lake Erie Basin. This monitoring is funded through the Department of Agriculture and Rural Development ($4.86M) and the Erb Family Foundation ($600,000). The investment from the Department is its largest in water quality monitoring. Sensors will be deployed that will measure nutrient pollution in real time, and the results of this monitoring can be used to further understand where interventions can have the biggest impact in keeping water clean. While this work is focused in Michigan, we believe the methodology is transferable throughout the Great Lakes region.

We hope that state agencies can use this information to better prioritize how they spend their limited time and money. If an agency can start moving towards a more targeted approach to spending money, more of our water will be protected and states will move closer to meeting their existing commitments.

Downstream Water Users Bear Financial Burden of Upstream Pollution

Ohioans across the state are struggling to afford their water and sewer bills. Our 2022 study shows that water bills are pushed even higher for communities that pull their drinking water from Lake Erie due to harmful algal blooms caused by upstream agricultural pollution.

Read More

The post New Targeting Strategies to Fight Algal Blooms appeared first on Alliance for the Great Lakes.

Original Article

News - Alliance for the Great Lakes

News - Alliance for the Great Lakes

https://greatlakes.org/2024/07/new-targeting-strategies-to-fight-algal-blooms/

Judy Freed

‘Containment breached’: How an oil spill in northwest Toronto made its way to Lake Ontario

By Emma McIntosh, The Narwhal

The Great Lakes News Collaborative includes Bridge Michigan; Circle of Blue; Great Lakes Now at Detroit Public Television; Michigan Public, Michigan’s NPR News Leader; and The Narwhal who work together to bring audiences news and information about the impact of climate change, pollution, and aging infrastructure on the Great Lakes and drinking water.

Read Now at Great Lakes Now.

Original Article

Great Lakes Now

Great Lakes Now

https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2024/07/containment-breached-how-an-oil-spill-in-northwest-toronto-made-its-way-to-lake-ontario/

The Narwhal

Raising monarch butterflies in Interlochen

By Izzy Ross, Interlochen Public Radio

This coverage is made possible through a partnership with IPR and Grist, a nonprofit independent media organization dedicated to telling stories of climate solutions and a just future.

Magnolia Montgomery, age 12, peered into a rectangular enclosure covered with white mesh.

Read Now at Great Lakes Now.

Original Article

Great Lakes Now

Great Lakes Now

https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2024/07/raising-monarch-butterflies-in-interlochen/

Interlochen Public Radio

Former state toxicologist says nitrate drinking water standards are too lax

By Henry Redman, Wisconsin Examiner

A former Wisconsin state toxicologist who was involved in creating the state’s nitrate standards for drinking water in the 1980s alleges the science that has informed those standards for decades is deeply flawed and the standards should be stricter.

Dave Belluck, who worked as a toxicologist for multiple states and the federal government, says that “the science is the science” and regulating agencies, including the U.S.

Read Now at Great Lakes Now.

Original Article

Great Lakes Now

Great Lakes Now

https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2024/07/former-state-toxicologist-says-nitrate-drinking-water-standards-are-too-lax/

Wisconsin Examiner