U. MICHIGAN (US) — Rather than being an isolated, one-time occurrence, Lake Erie’s monumental 2011 algae bloom was more likely a sign of things to come, a new study suggests.
The largest harmful algae bloom in Lake Erie’s recorded history was likely caused by the confluence of changing farming practices and weather conditions that are expected to become more common in the future due to climate change, say researchers who looked at factors that may have contributed to the event and analyzed the likelihood of future massive blooms in the lake.
“Intense spring rainstorms were a major contributing factor, and such storms are part of a long-term trend for this region that is projected to get worse in the future due to climate change,” says aquatic ecologist Donald Scavia, director of the Graham Sustainability Institute at the University of Michigan. “On top of that we have agricultural practices that provide the key nutrients that fuel large-scale blooms.”
[sources]
A series of intense spring rainstorms and runoff events resulted in record-breaking levels of phosphorus, a nutrient in crop fertilizers that also fuels rampant algae growth, washing into western Lake Erie.
That set the stage for an algae bloom that covered about 2,000 square miles by the time it peaked in early October 2011. That’s more than three times larger than any previously observed Lake Erie algae bloom, including blooms that occurred in the 1960s and 1970s, when the lake was famously declared dead.
The 2011 spring storms included one that dumped 2 inches of rain over Ohio’s Maumee River basin in 24 hours on May 26 and 6.8 inches total for the month of May 2011—more than 20 percent above the long-term monthly average. The Maumee is a primary tributary to western Lake Erie, and it drains an agricultural watershed where corn, soybeans, and wheat are grown.
For the study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers used 12 computerized climate models to determine if rainstorms like the May 2011 events are more likely to occur in the future. The models, which incorporate the anticipated effects of human-caused climate change due to the buildup of heat-trapping greenhouse gases, showed that the frequency of spring rainstorms that drop more than 1.2 inches is likely to double in this region by the end of the century.
“The models do predict an increase in extreme springtime precipitation events, and that’s driven by an increase in greenhouse gases,” says Allison Steiner, associate professor of atmospheric, oceanic, and space sciences.
Once the 2011 Lake Erie bloom formed, unusually warm water temperatures and calm winds created ideal conditions to promote summer algae growth. “All of these factors are consistent with expected future conditions,” the authors write.
No-till farming
An algae bloom is a rapid buildup of algae in a body of water, and harmful blooms are those that damage other organisms—including humans—through the production of toxins or by other means. Algae blooms can foul harbors, clog boat motors, reduce fish populations, and sometimes lead to the formation of low-oxygen “dead zones” where most aquatic organisms cannot survive.
The 2011 Lake Erie bloom was composed almost entirely of toxic blue-green Microcystis algae. Concentrations of mycrocystin, a liver toxin produced by the algae, peaked at about 224 times World Health Organization guidelines, according to the study.
In addition to meteorological conditions, other factors contributed to the 2011 Lake Erie algae bloom. Chief among them is the widespread adoption, since the mid-1990s, of no-till farming and other agricultural practices that have increased the availability of a type of phosphorous, known as dissolved reactive phosphorous or DRP, that promotes algae growth.
In no-till farming, crops are planted without plowing by inserting seeds into small holes. The technique reduces erosion but leaves high levels of phosphorous-bearing fertilizer in the upper surface soil, where heavy rainstorms can wash it away. Trends toward autumn fertilizer application and surface broadcasting of fertilizers also create conditions for enhanced phosphorous runoff.
Unless there’s a significant shift away from these practices, runoff from farmland in the Maumee River watershed and other Western Basin watersheds will likely continue to provide the nutrients needed to trigger massive Lake Erie algae blooms.
In addition, the current emphasis on producing corn for ethanol production, as well as a trend in the Midwest toward declining acreage reserved for conservation purposes, is likely to exacerbate the problem, says Michael Moore, a professor of environmental economics and one of the paper’s co-authors.
“Corn is the crop on which phosphate-based fertilizer is most heavily applied,” Moore says. “So the intensification of corn production is a problem, and part of the solution would be to rethink this emphasis on corn production for biofuels.”
The research was supported by grants from the National Science Foundation, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and the Lake Erie Protection Fund.
Source: University of Michigan