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LAKE ERIE SOURCE TRACKING OF HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS Douglas D. Kane 1, Joseph D. Conroy 2,3,

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Presentation on theme: "LAKE ERIE SOURCE TRACKING OF HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS Douglas D. Kane 1, Joseph D. Conroy 2,3,"— Presentation transcript:

1 LAKE ERIE SOURCE TRACKING OF HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS Douglas D. Kane 1, dkane@defiance.edu,dkane@defiance.edu Joseph D. Conroy 2,3, conroy.27@osu.edu,conroy.27@osu.edu Justin D. Chaffin 4, justin.chaffin@rockets.utoledo.edu,justin.chaffin@rockets.utoledo.edu Thomas B. Bridgeman 4, tbridge@UTNet.UToledo.Edutbridge@UTNet.UToledo.Edu 1 Natural Science and Mathematics Division, Defiance College, Defiance, OH 43512. 2 Inland Fisheries Research Unit, Division of Wildlife, Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Hebron, OH 43025. 3 Aquatic Ecology Laboratory, Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal Biology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43212 4 Department of Environmental Sciences and Lake Erie Center, University of Toledo, Oregon, OH 43616.

2 Outline Problem Approach Methods Results Conclusions

3 Problem Microcystis blooms have become more frequent and larger in Lake Erie in the last 10-15 years August 2003-OhioLink

4 Approach Use contemporaneous sampling (within 1 week) in the Maumee River, Maumee Bay, and Lake Erie to determine location/quantity of Microcystis T1 T1= The Bend T2 T2 = Rt. 66 Bridge T3 T3 = Independence Dam T4 T4 = Mary Jane Thurston State Park T5 T5= Farnsworth Metropark

5 LEAST Sampling Sites T1 T1= The Bend T2 T2 = Rt. 66 Bridge T3 T3 = Indendence Dam T4 T4 = Mary Jane Thurston State Park T5 T5= Farnsworth Metropark T1T2 T3 T4 T5

6 Methods Boats/ Wading YSI Multiprobe and PAR meter Fluoroprobe Water Samples – Nutrients – Chlorophyll a – Phytoplankton – Microcystis

7 Temporal/ Spatial Trends in the Maumee River

8 Temporal/ Spatial Trends in Soluble Reactive Phosphorus Site- p<0.001 Month- p<0.001 Site X Month- p<0.001

9 Temporal/ Spatial Trends in Chlorophyll a Site- p<0.001 Month- p<0.001 Site X Month- p<0.001

10 Temporal/ Spatial Trends in % Cyanobacteria (Fluoroprobe) Site- p<0.001 Month- p<0.001 Site X Month- p<0.001

11 Temporal/ Spatial Trends in % Microcystis (microscopic)

12 Temporal/ Spatial Trends in the Maumee System

13 Temporal/ Spatial Trends in Soluble Reactive Phosphorus

14 Temporal/ Spatial Trends in Chlorophyll a

15 Temporal/ Spatial Trends in Secchi Depth

16 Secchi Transparency vs. Chlorophyll a

17 Conclusions High levels of SRP (>100 μg/L!), phytoplankton (>200 μg/L!), and Microcystis (80% of total pp biomass!) in MR; variable through time and space Microscopical enumeration does not agree with Fluoroprobe data in MR SRP- June and August MR>MB>WLE; September MB>WLE>MR Chlorophyll a- August> June~=September Secchi depth- MR< MB< LE (MR <0.5 m) Microcystis found at all sites at all times sampled

18 Phytoplankton, Sediments, and Nutrients in Maumee System are HIGHLY variable in time and space June 2003-OhioLink August 2003-OhioLink

19 Future Directions Continued Monitoring of Sites in MR- GLISTEN -Great Lakes Innovative Stewardship through Education Network Genetic Analysis of Microcystis

20 Thanks! USEPA Limnology Lab- OSU HU- NCWQR Peter Bichier Chris Bronish Other UT staff


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