"TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. — Reducing phosphorus levels in Lake Erie is a worthy goal but not necessarily a cure-all for one of the lake's biggest environmental hazards: "dead zones" with oxygen levels so low that fish can't survive, scientists said Tuesday.
Researchers with the Carnegie Institution for Science said Erie's biggest dead zone on record formed in summer 2012. While phosphorus-laden fertilizer runoff from farms played a part, weather conditions including drought and low flows from tributary rivers and streams were even more influential, they said.
The findings suggest policymakers working on plans for combating the lake's dead zones — and its worsening problem of harmful algae blooms — should consider meteorological trends as well as agricultural management practices, said environmental scientist Anna Michalak, who led the study. That's especially the case as climate change brings more extreme weather, she said."
John Flesher reports for the Associated Press January 6, 2015.
"Scientists: Weather Plays Big Role in Lake Erie 'Dead Zones'"
Source: AP, 01/07/2015