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Lake & Waterway Management focuses on the practices and strategies that keep lakes, rivers, and wetlands healthy. Topics include lake health, ecosystem balance, climate change impacts, shoreline restoration, fish populations, and sustainable management techniques that protect water resources for the future.

Prop Chop Spreads Eurasian Milfoil in Black Lake as Officials Debate Control Options

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/ Published in Aquatic Invasive Species, Lake & Waterway Management
Boat Propeller Tangled in Weeds
County legislators are considering providing some type of support to a group trying to get rid of the Eurasian milfoil infestation in Black Lake, New York. The milfoil problem is exacerbated when propellers on boats going through the lake chop it up (prop chop) the and spread its seeds. Legislators debated what methods could stop
aquatic invasive speciesaquatic plant harvesterboating impactschannel dredgingeurasian milfoilinvasive aquatic plantslake managementmechanical harvestingnavigation lanesNew Yorkprop chopweed harvesting

Rhode Island Beach Access Debate Highlights Rights to Walk Fish and Collect Seaweed

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/ Published in Lake & Waterway Management, Resources
Beachfront Property
The issue of beach access is ever present in Rhode Island, but has taken on renewed prominence in the last few years, due at least in some part to a man’s arrest in June 2019. He was collecting seaweed on the beach just east of Charlestown Town Beach. Beachfront property owners had hired a security
beach accesscoastal lawcoastal managementpublic shoreline rightsrecreation accessrhode islandseaweed collectionshoreline accessshoreline disputeswaterfront property

Donations Help Fund Weed Harvesting and Lake Maintenance at Public Boat Launches

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/ Published in Aquatic Plant Management, Lake & Waterway Management
Mechanical Weed Harvester in Wisconsin
A public boat launch doesn’t necessarily make access to a lake free. There are costs involved in keeping the waters weed free, navigable for recreation and stocked with fish. McDill Inland Lake Protection and Rehabilitation District’s president Krista Olson asks people visiting any lake to utlize the donation boxes. Those donations are very important for
aquatic plant harvesterboating accesscommunity fundinglake districtlake maintenancelake managementmechanical harvestingnavigation lanespublic boat launchrecreation accessweed harvestingWisconsin

Overuse of Copper Sulfate Leads to Sterile Lakes

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/ Published in Algae & Harmful Algal Blooms, Lake & Waterway Management
Virginia Lake has Accumulated Silt in 35 Coves
Copper sulfate is an inorganic compound that combines sulfur with copper. It can kill bacteria, algae, roots, plants, snails, and fungi.  Many local farm stores keep the product on store shelves helping to make it the most used, and the most economical algae control available for ponds and lakes. Copper Sulfate is ineffective in the
copper sulfatecopper sulfate sediment

Study Finds Strategic Weed Harvesting Can Remove Phosphorus and Support Clear Lake Management

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/ Published in Lake & Waterway Management, Resources
Aquatic Plant Harvester Removing Weeds
Intensive in-lake and watershed management caused Kohlman Lake, the northernmost lake in the Phalen Chain of Lakes in Minnesota, to go from a relatively turbid to a clear water state. Aquatic plants responded to the clean waters by growing up to the surface. The change in lake state and a comprehensive water quality monitoring dataset
aquatic plant managementaquatic vegetationKohlman Lakelake managementmechanical harvestingMinnesotanutrient removalphosphorusrecreation accesstotal phosphoruswater qualitywatershed managementweed harvesting

Weed Harvester Approved to Remove Macroalgae and Reduce Harmful Algal Blooms in Georgica Pond

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/ Published in Algae & Harmful Algal Blooms, Lake & Waterway Management
Thick mat of algae and weeds coming on board weed harvester
An aquatic weed harvester was used to remove macroalgae from Georgica Pond in New York from 2016 through 2018 and on a limited basis last year, an effort to inhibit harmful algal blooms, including toxic cyanobacteria, or blue-green algae. Approval has just been granted for the the mechanical harvester to be operated from June to
aquatic plant harvesterblue-green algaecyanobacteriageorgica pondharmful algal bloomsmacroalgaemechanical harvestingNew Yorknutrient removalphosphoruswater qualityweed harvesting

USACE Uses GPS Tracking to Improve Transparency of Aquatic Herbicide Applications

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/ Published in Aquatic Herbicides, Lake & Waterway Management
Spraying herbicides on aquatic plants.
In order to stop the destruction of infrastructure by aquatic invasive species, USACE and its partners are using three methods of management: biological, mechanical, and chemical.   Each process varies in its effectiveness depending on the species of aquatic plant being treated – leaving the team to rely heavily on data to determine the best method
aquatic herbicidesaquatic invasive speciesbiological controlchemical treatmentcontractor oversightGPS trackingherbicide applicationinvasive aquatic plantslake managementmechanical harvestingspray trackingUSACEwater resources

Study Links Human Shoreline Disturbance to Changes in Aquatic Plants and Algal Blooms

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/ Published in Algae & Harmful Algal Blooms, Lake & Waterway Management
Shorelines help filter pollutants, protect against erosion and provide habitat for fish and other forms of wildlife.
Algal blooms in Bednesti Lake, British Columbia, Canada, over recent years led researchers to look into how humans impact aquatic life. Overall what they found was a chain reaction, when a type of aquatic plant like a lily pad was removed, other plants disappeared too. Researchers analyzed 16 human-caused disturbances and 10 natural disturbances to
algal bloomsaquatic plantsBritish ColumbiaCanadaecosystem changehabitat losshuman impactslake healthlake managementlily padsshoreline disturbancewater quality

Black Lake Weed Harvester Removes 6,000 Pounds of Invasive Milfoil to Improve Boating Access

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/ Published in Aquatic Plant Management, Lake & Waterway Management
Aquarius Systems HM-620 Plant Harvester
In the last few decades, the lake’s weedy, northern-most portion has clogged hulls and deterred boaters from entering the lake from the Oswegatchie River. Patches of weeds greet the water’s surface near every dock, and nearly invisible from a distance on a windy day, matted greenery creates a basin of weeds seven-feet-deep in some spots.
aquatic invasive speciesaquatic weed harvesterBlack Lake New Yorkboating accesscompostingeurasian watermilfoilfertilizerinvasive aquatic plantslake managementmechanical harvestingmilfoilnavigation channelsnutrient removalweed harvesting

Iowa Crews Harvest Nearly 1 Million Pounds of Curlyleaf Pondweed to Clear Boat Lanes

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/ Published in Aquatic Plant Management, Lake & Waterway Management
Aquarius Systems Large Weed Harvester
With all of the rainfall over the past three weeks or so, the topic of curlyleaf pondweed has kind of taken a back seat. However, as we enter the month of July, it is a good time to reflect on the results of the 2018 curlyleaf pondweed treatment and harvesting process. Mechanical harvesting of East
aquatic invasive speciesaquatic weed harvesterboating accesscompostingcurly leaf pondweedcurlyleaf pondweedEast Okobojiinvasive aquatic plantsIowalake managementLower Garmechanical harvestingnavigation lanesweed harvesting
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