Posts belonging to Category Lake Issues



State hatcheries not covered by algae warning

The Columbus Dispatch

State hatcheries not covered by algae warning

Friday, July 16, 2010  02:52 AM

By Gina Potthoff and Spencer Hunt

Ohio's St. Marys fish hatchery is made up of 26 ponds along the eastern shore of polluted Grand Lake St. Marys. The fish, which are used to stock bodies of water, swim in untreated lake water. The state hasn't seen a serious toxin threat in them.

Ohio's St. Marys fish hatchery is made up of 26 ponds along the eastern shore of polluted Grand Lake St. Marys. The fish, which are used to stock bodies of water, swim in untreated lake water. The state hasn't seen a serious toxin threat in them.

A government warning that people shouldn’t touch the toxic, algae-filled water of Grand Lake St. Marys doesn’t extend to the millions of fish raised at a nearby state hatchery.

The Ohio Department of Natural Resources raises catfish, saugeye, largemouth bass and other species in 26 ponds along the eastern shore of the 13,000-acre polluted lake. The fish, valued at $3.5 million, swim in untreated water taken directly from the lake, which is in Mercer and Auglaize counties in western Ohio.

There also is no warning about the state’s Hebron Fish Hatchery, which takes its water from nearby algae-choked Buckeye Lake to raise fish valued at $3.5million.

Elmer Heyob, the fish-hatchery administrator for the Department of Natural Resources, said he doesn’t consider the toxins and the low oxygen levels that algae blooms can create a big-enough threat to change the water supplies of the two hatcheries.

Ohio Department of Natural Resources

“Obviously, we’re concerned (toxins) could be an issue, but they haven’t been,” Heyob said.

However, David Culver, an emeritus professor who runs Ohio State University’s limnology laboratory, is worried. “The quality of the water in the lake affects the quality of water in the ponds,” said Culver, who has tested Grand Lake and Buckeye Lake for more than three years in an ODNR project to optimize fish production at the hatcheries.

“You get algae blooms in the ponds, you kill the baby fish, and that makes everyone mad.”

The fish grown at Natural Resources’ six hatcheries are valued at about $11.6 million. They are used to stock lakes, reservoirs and streams statewide.

Fertilizers and manure that run off nearby farms have helped make Grand Lake St. Marys one of Ohio’s most-polluted bodies of water. The resulting phosphorus feeds algae and creates vast blooms of cyanobacteria, which is also called blue-green algae.

This year, the algae have produced three toxins in the lake and created a dead zone that is killing fish. One species of algae produced the liver toxin microcystin, which also has been found in Buckeye Lake, although in much lower levels.

The pollution and toxins have become so bad at Grand Lake St. Marys that Gov. Ted Strickland asked the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for help on July 2.

Water from Grand Lake St. Marys was used two weeks ago to fill two hatchery ponds where 160,000 channel catfish will be raised, said hatchery supervisor Morton Pugh.

Buckeye Lake water is funneled about every two weeks into the Hebron hatchery through a canal. Hebron hatchery supervisor Pat Howard said his staff has learned to deal with low oxygen levels over 20 years.

Heyob said the algae have not had a “significant” effect on raising fish from fertilized eggs. In a clean pond, 50percent to 70percent of those eggs grow into fingerlings.

Experts said that fish raised in these hatcheries probably are safe to eat.

John Rodgers, a Clemson University environmental toxicologist, said young fish placed in toxin-free lakes or streams can rid themselves of toxins in their body in a week.

Fish caught in Grand Lake St. Marys, Rodgers said, are a different story. A specific kind of saugeye grown at the St. Marys Hatchery goes into Grand Lake St. Marys. This year, 195,000 fish were used to stock the lake.

Paul Zimba, director of the Center for Coastal Studies at Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi, said microcystin can accumulate in fish tissue.

Rodgers said it’s best not to eat fish caught in algae-rich water. “It’s better to err on the side of caution, especially as we learn more about these toxins,” he said.

Because of mercury contamination, the Ohio EPA advises that people eat no more than one meal per week of most fish caught from Grand Lake St. Marys.

gpotthoff@dispatch.com
shunt@dispatch.com

For more info and pictures See:
Memo: Blue-Green Algae in Grand Lake St. Marys

MEMO: Blue-Green Algae in Grand Lake St. Marys

Memo to:     Indiana Lakes Management Work Group and Interested Parties
From:            Greg Biberdorf
Date:             July 16, 2010
Subject:      Blue-Green Algae infestation in Grand Lake St. Marys in Ohio

The following photos were sent to me from Division of Nature Preserves in Ohio and are shots of blue-green algae infestation on Grand Lake St. Marys in Ohio.

I don’t know who took the pictures, unfortunately. According to Ken Brunswick from Nature Preserves, this area flows into the Wabash River and helps explain why the river flows through the Limberlost Territory green in color.

Thank you to John Bacone and Ken Brunswick for the very graphic depictions of the green slime. Ken notes that when he was younger the shores of this lake were lined with folks fishing, but now a days, when he goes by it, he seldom sees anyone fishing there.

The guy on the jet ski is braver than I would be. If you remember reading the classic Dr. Seuss book “Bartholomew and the Oobleck” you might see where Dr. Seuss got an inspiration. Unfortunately, this “oobleck in the lakes can’t be treated by just saying “I’m sorry.”

It is apparent that blue-green algae is becoming more and more an issue, and the causes of it are of concern as well as the effects.

Addressing the inputs into lakes and rivers that cause these blooms is part of the mission of LARE of course, as well as for so many other agencies and

organizations (IWF, NRCS, ISDA, SWCD’s, IDEM, etc.). These pictures do put the problem firmly in focus. Since the September meeting of the LMWG may well deal with these
issues, I hope you find these shots of interest.

News Article on this memo:

The Columbus Dispatch
“State hatcheries not covered by algae warning”


Click on Picture
to Enlarge

Forum on Flooding

“Forum on Flooding” was sponsored by the Tippecanoe Watershed Foundation and and the Kosciusko Lakes and Streams on Tuesday, November 17, 2009.   The focus of this Form was our upper Tippecanoe River watershed.

Following this presentation there were numerous breakout sessions allowing the 100 participants toTWF
ask questions of agencies and groups including National Weather Service, USGS, several DNR groups, several Kosciusko, Noble and Whitely County departments, and The Nature Conservancy.

Eileen Boekestein, coordinator of Kosciusko Lakes and Streams, made available the following information.

Source:  Mike Lattimer (Mike attended the presentation)

Mute Swan

DNR personnel are working to educate the public on the negative impacts of mute swans, monitoring statewide mute swan population trends, and managing mute swan human conflicts.

The mute swan, an alien species introduced from Europe, is now a resident in Indiana.  What is the Indiana DNR doing about Mute Swans?   Click on flyer to view PDF from the DNR.