Algae comes and goes as part of a lake cycle
Algae are primitive, primarily aquatic, one-celled or
multicellular plant-like organisms that lack true stems, roots, and leaves but usually
contain chlorophyll. They grow in all lakes, not just Delavan Lake, when they have the right conditions such as
adequate nutrients (mostly phosphorus but nitrogen is important too), light
levels, pH, temperature, etc. Generally, the amount of phosphorus controls the
amount of algae found in a freshwater lake or water body. The more
nutrient-enriched a lake, typically the more algae in the lake.
Healthy lakes need algae. Algae are important to the productivity
of a lake or water body. Algae are primary producers. They use sunlight (through
photosynthesis) to produce carbohydrates and are eaten by grazers such as
protozoa and zooplankton (little animals like water fleas and rotifers). The
zooplankton are, in turn, grazed upon by fish, which are eaten by bigger fish,
and on up the food chain. A productive lake produces large fish and good
fishing for humans as well as supporting food and habitat for wildlife and
waterfowl. In this context, most algae are desirable for lakes.
Blue-green algae is present in all lakes and will bloom from time to time. Blue-green algae are actually bacteria.
They are called cyanobacteria after the blue-green pigments that they produce.
Cyanobacteria are of greater concern than true algae because some species can
produce potent toxins. However, even known toxin-producing species may not
produce toxins all the time. Even if blue-green blooms are not toxic or are
composed of a species that does not produce toxins, they are unsightly and when
they decompose often produce bad odors.
To get rid of the stuff, there are no simple answers. Algae may grow for a variety of
reasons, but nutrients generally limit algae growth. Any long-term solution to
algae management involves nutrient reduction. Nutrients throughout the watershed may be contributing to the algae
problem: Phosphorus is Delavan Lake's biggest culprit. See related story.
A simple Google search pops up a few home remedies for blooms
when, and if, they happen, but these are NOT recommended tactics.
Raking the algae to shore is partially effective with some types
of algae (filamentous) but are fruitless with blue-green algae, since it isn't
technically an algae. Using barley straw or any other straw for algae control
is an idea that caught on because of web reports on its success in ponds. The
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has not registered barley straw as an
algaecide or algaestat, and we don't recommend taking matters into your own
hands with this tactic. Results with barley, according to the English
researchers, can take several months... Results from American research
have not been consistent or very positive either. The straw is unattractive
lake clutter because it doesn't decompose quickly, so it would just trade one
eyesore for another.
Photo used with permission
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