rock lake seminar on lake systems, algae, plants, and ... · why are blue-green algae of concern?...

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Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems, Algae, Plants, and Plant Management Laws: Algae Gina LaLiberte WDNR Science Services

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Page 1: Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems, Algae, Plants, and ... · Why are blue-green algae of concern? • They may form nuisance blooms given enough nutrients and the right conditions

Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems,Algae, Plants, and Plant Management Laws:

AlgaeGina LaLiberte

WDNR Science Services

Page 2: Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems, Algae, Plants, and ... · Why are blue-green algae of concern? • They may form nuisance blooms given enough nutrients and the right conditions

What are algae?

• “Pond scum,” “seaweed,” “blanket weed”• Photosynthetic (mostly)• Tiniest to largest plant-like organisms• Important as food and shelter in lakes

• Types of algae• Impacts of zebra mussels• Seasonal & regional trends

Page 3: Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems, Algae, Plants, and ... · Why are blue-green algae of concern? • They may form nuisance blooms given enough nutrients and the right conditions

These can be mistaken for algae

Freshwater sponges (Spongilla)

Duckweed (Lemna)

Watermeal(Wolffia)

Aquatic mosses (Fissidens, Fontinalis, Drepanocladus)J.-P. Frahm WDOE CLNPT

Page 4: Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems, Algae, Plants, and ... · Why are blue-green algae of concern? • They may form nuisance blooms given enough nutrients and the right conditions

Plant-like Green AlgaeChara (muskgrass, skunkgrass) Nitella

Tolypella

W. Kolvoort

E. NatN. Sloth

J.C. Schou

Page 5: Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems, Algae, Plants, and ... · Why are blue-green algae of concern? • They may form nuisance blooms given enough nutrients and the right conditions

Planktonic Algae: Blue-green Algae

Anabaena

Microcystis

Gloeotrichia

Page 6: Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems, Algae, Plants, and ... · Why are blue-green algae of concern? • They may form nuisance blooms given enough nutrients and the right conditions

Why are blue-green algae of concern?• They may form nuisance blooms given enough

nutrients and the right conditions.• Compounds in cell walls of all blue-green algae

may irritate the skin in sensitive individuals.• Some strains can make liver or nerve toxins if

conditions are right (grazing, nutrient stress, other factors).

• Not all blue-green algae make liver or nerve toxins.

Page 7: Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems, Algae, Plants, and ... · Why are blue-green algae of concern? • They may form nuisance blooms given enough nutrients and the right conditions

Other Planktonic Algae

DiatomsEuglenoids

Chrysophytes

DinoflagellatesGreen Algae

Cryptomonads

Page 8: Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems, Algae, Plants, and ... · Why are blue-green algae of concern? • They may form nuisance blooms given enough nutrients and the right conditions

Filamentous Green Algae: Spirogyra

“Water silk,” “frog spit”Loose green “clouds” or matsFloat to surface and break downFeels slippery, not cottonyUnbranchedStrands curl at bottom

Resting cells

Page 9: Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems, Algae, Plants, and ... · Why are blue-green algae of concern? • They may form nuisance blooms given enough nutrients and the right conditions

Filamentous Green Algae: Cladophora

Many branchesRough, cottony textureMay support heavy epiphyte loadsGrows attached to rocks, other surfacesWidespread in WI lakes & riversCladophora glomerata is problematic in Lake Michigan

Page 10: Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems, Algae, Plants, and ... · Why are blue-green algae of concern? • They may form nuisance blooms given enough nutrients and the right conditions

Filamentous Green Algae: “Rhizoclonium” (Cladophora?)

Large, coarseSparse short branches, if anyRough texture and heavy epiphyte loadsOften entangled in macrophyte bedsMay be a species of Cladophora, which is a close relative

Page 11: Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems, Algae, Plants, and ... · Why are blue-green algae of concern? • They may form nuisance blooms given enough nutrients and the right conditions

Filamentous Green Algae: OedogoniumUnbranchedRough, cottony textureMay support heavy epiphyte loads

Page 12: Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems, Algae, Plants, and ... · Why are blue-green algae of concern? • They may form nuisance blooms given enough nutrients and the right conditions

Why were filamentous algae a problem in 2010?

• Nutrients, other factors• Zebra mussels?

Korth Bay algae image courtesy of Rock Lake homeowner

Korth Bay algal mat

Page 13: Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems, Algae, Plants, and ... · Why are blue-green algae of concern? • They may form nuisance blooms given enough nutrients and the right conditions

How zebra mussels promote growth of filamentous algae

• Mussels eat phytoplankton, increasing water clarity• Nutrients are cycled close to the lake bottom

Page 14: Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems, Algae, Plants, and ... · Why are blue-green algae of concern? • They may form nuisance blooms given enough nutrients and the right conditions

Zebra mussel effects in Lake Michigan:Cladophora glomerata

1986Turbid water

2001Clear water

Cladophora covering bottom

Lake Michigan 1986 & 2001 photos: UW-Milwaukee Great Lakes WATER Institute

Page 15: Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems, Algae, Plants, and ... · Why are blue-green algae of concern? • They may form nuisance blooms given enough nutrients and the right conditions

Zebra mussel effects in Lake Erie: Microcystis

NOAA MODIS

Thomas Archer

Mussels reject Microcystis when feedingMicrocystis regulates its buoyancy and can move back up in the water column.

Page 16: Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems, Algae, Plants, and ... · Why are blue-green algae of concern? • They may form nuisance blooms given enough nutrients and the right conditions

Can similar problems occur in inland lakes?Filamentous algae problems were reported in other Wisconsin lakes in 2010.

MSU paper: zebra mussels promoted dominance of Microcystis in low-nutrient Michigan lakes, so this is something to watch out for in the future.

UW-M Great Lakes WATER InstituteNOAA

Page 17: Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems, Algae, Plants, and ... · Why are blue-green algae of concern? • They may form nuisance blooms given enough nutrients and the right conditions

Lakes are dynamic—so are algal populations

Physical• Temperature• Light• Turbulence• Substrate

Chemical• Nutrients• N:P ratios• CO2 & O2

• pH

Biological• Genetics• Grazing• Viruses,

bacteria, fungi

• Chemical defenses

Page 18: Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems, Algae, Plants, and ... · Why are blue-green algae of concern? • They may form nuisance blooms given enough nutrients and the right conditions

Seasonal & Regional Trends

• Climate change will have unknown effects• Heavy rains: extra nutrients• Earlier warming & extended warming may

lead to blooms• Invasive species?

Figures from Wisconsin Initiative on Climate Change Impacts 2011: Wisconsin’s Changing Climate: Impacts and Adaptations

Page 19: Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems, Algae, Plants, and ... · Why are blue-green algae of concern? • They may form nuisance blooms given enough nutrients and the right conditions

Online ResourcesWDNR blue-green algae info (also see additional links on the left side of the

page): http://dnr.wi.gov/lakes/bluegreenalgae/Michigan State University fact sheet about blooms in southwest Michigan:

http://www.kbs.msu.edu/community-outreach/extension-land-and-water/information-resources/microcystis-in-southwest-michigan-lakes

MSU study of zebra mussels effects on blooms in low-nutrient Michigan lakes: http://www.aslo.org/lo/toc/vol_49/issue_2/0482.pdf

World Health Organization book, Toxic Cyanobacteria in Water (downloadable) -technical information on blue-green algae: http://www.who.int/water_sanitation_health/resourcesquality/toxicyanbact/en/

Wisconsin’s Changing Climate: Impacts and Adaptations: http://www.wicci.wisc.edu/

How to Know the Freshwater Algae and Algae of the Western Great Lakes Area(downloadable): http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/26337#page/1/mode/1up and http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/23616

Page 20: Rock Lake Seminar on Lake Systems, Algae, Plants, and ... · Why are blue-green algae of concern? • They may form nuisance blooms given enough nutrients and the right conditions

Photo CreditsSpongilla: R. Korth, UW-Extension http://dnr.wi.gov/org/es/science/citizen/Duckweed: Gary Fewless – Wetland Plants of Wisconsin

http://www.uwgb.edu/biodiversity/herbarium/wetland_plants/lemmin01.htmWatermeal: Virginia Tech Weed ID Guide http://www.ppws.vt.edu/scott/weed_id/wolsp.htmFissidens: Jan-Peter Frahm http://www.jan-peter-frahm.de/Arbeitskreis/Besondere_Moosfunde.htmFontinalis: Washington State Department of Ecology

http://www.ecy.wa.gov/programs/wq/plants/plantid2/photopages/fontinalis.htmlDrepanocladus: Crater Lake National Park Trust http://craterlaketrust.org/science-and-discovery/mossChara: N. Sloth http://www.biopix.dk/Photo.asp?PhotoId=74518Chara: Emile Nat http://web.ku.edu/~ifaa/jpg/Nat/Nat.htmlChara: Wim Kolvoort http://www.kranswieren.nl/Nitella: J.C. Schou http://www.biopix.com/photo.asp?photoid=35186&photo=nitella-translucensNitella: Jason Oyadomari

http://www.keweenawalgae.mtu.edu/ALGAL_IMAGES/charophyceans/Nitella_n21_swedetownplant0_dc.jpgSpirogyra: A. Shambaugh http://healthvermont.gov/enviro/bg_algae/photos.aspxDreissena: GerardM http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Dreissena_polymorpha.jpgLake Michigan 1986 & 2001: UW-Milwaukee Great Lakes WATER Institute

http://www.glwi.uwm.edu/research/aquaticecology/cladophora/Lake Erie satellite: NOAA-MODIS posted at http://www.lakescientist.com/2009/satellite-imagery-will-help-track-

lake-erie-algae-growthLake Erie: Thomas Archer posted at

http://www.surfriderlakemichigan.org/news/phosphates_blamed_for_recent_algae_bloom_on_lake_erieSouth Bass Island: NOAA http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories2006/s2706.htm

All unattributed photos by Gina LaLiberte, Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources