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hatrack

(59,587 posts)
Sun May 16, 2021, 09:38 AM May 2021

2/3 Of Lake Okeechobee Covered By Cyanobacteria; Toxic Bloom Moving Into Caloosahatchee River

The scene at Pahokee marina on Lake Okeechobee last week was a warning sign: A thick mat of algae in various shades of green, brown, gray and fluorescent blue covered the area around boat slips. In some spots, the gunk was so dense it stuck out 2 inches above the water.

Elsewhere on the lake, the algae wasn’t as chunky, but satellite photos were just as shocking: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration monitoring images on Wednesday showed nearly two-thirds of the lake, or 500 square miles, were covered with blue-green algae, the potentially toxic stuff that has fouled rivers and canals in the west and east coasts of Florida in past years, killing fish and scaring tourists away. Green streaks of algae are already visible moving down from the Moore Haven lock on the Caloosahatchee River, which has received Lake Okeechobee water releases in recent weeks to lower lake levels.

Is South Florida in for another summer of slime? The answer has a lot to do with how much water will be flushed from the lake to Florida’s west and east coasts. Already, Lake Okeechobee is at 13.6 feet, 2.5 feet higher than what it was at this time last year. Forecasters are predicting a “well above average” hurricane season this year.

“This is an impending disaster,” said John Cassani, of Calusa Waterkeeper. He and other activists are asking Gov. Ron DeSantis to declare a state of emergency to protect the Caloosahatchee from harmful lake discharges as the rainy season approaches and the need to lower water levels will be unavoidable. “Think of the lake as a giant cesspool being flushed into the Caloosahatchee every day with no end in sight. It’s a catastrophic situation.” The bloom, which expanded quickly over the past few weeks as temperatures rose, is fueling heated debate about how the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers should manage lake waters considering conflicting interests: the need to send water south for Everglades restoration and the guarantee of sufficient supplies for farming while also managing flood protection structures such as its aging Herbert Hoover dike.

EDIT

https://www.tampabay.com/news/florida-politics/2021/05/15/impending-disaster-worsening-algae-bloom-on-floridas-lake-okeechobee-threatens-coasts-again/

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2/3 Of Lake Okeechobee Covered By Cyanobacteria; Toxic Bloom Moving Into Caloosahatchee River (Original Post) hatrack May 2021 OP
That is the cost of the sugar in your coffee. Chainfire May 2021 #1
Or lack of regulation by repugz Ferrets are Cool May 2021 #2
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