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Great Lakes: resource at risk.


For centuries the Great Lakes have been treated callously. These five magnificent lakes--Superior, Michigan, Huron, Erie, and Ontario--located along the eastern half of the Canadian-U.S. border have served as a virtual sewer catching waste from industry, agriculture, commercial shipping, and households. Their natural barriers to other water systems have been breached, exposing indigenous ecosystems to aggressive invaders. They've been used as a highway for colossal ships that require deepened and broadened channels to crisscross the lakes, and that import exotic species along with their intended cargo. At times it could seem that this long-suffering water system will see no end of indignities. But recent renewed focus on the unique and tremendous value of this resource by governments and communities surrounding the lakes may turn the tide of neglect and abuse.

According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and  (EPA EPA eicosapentaenoic acid.

EPA
abbr.
eicosapentaenoic acid


EPA,
n.pr See acid, eicosapentaenoic.

EPA,
n.
), the Great Lakes contain 21% of the Earth's and about 84% of United States' surface freshwater. That's about 22,000 cubic kilometers of water spread over 94,250 square miles. Each year the lakes provide more than 6.7 million cubic meters of water to municipalities and quadruple that to industry. They support a commercial fishery worth about $13 million as of 2002, according to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS USGS United States Geological Survey (US Department of the Interior) ), and a sport-fishing industry of nearly $1.3 billion as of 2001, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Today about 25% of Canadians and 10% of Americans--a total of more than 33 million people--live in the Great Lakes watershed.

"The whole industrial expansion that took place during the 'robber baron' era [of the late nineteenth century] expanded along the shores of the Great Lakes," says Deborah Swackhamer, a University of Minnesota (body, education) University of Minnesota - The home of Gopher.

http://umn.edu/.

Address: Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.
 professor of environmental chemistry. Soon ships were carrying iron ore, coal, and limestone from mines and quarries to steel mills and later steel to factories and products to markets. In addition to serving as a transportation system, the lakes provided a place to discharge

manufacturing by-products.

Unlike a sewer, however, whatever enters this lake system stays awhile. On average, less than 1% of the five lakes' water turns over each year, which means that many pollutants stay in place. They settle in sediments, adhere to other surfaces, become suspended in water, and bioaccumulate in organisms. Similarly, with the exception of migratory birds, most wildlife in the basin spend their entire life cycle in or near the lakes.

As a result of all these stressors, the lakes now house fish that are dangerous to eat, water that can be unsafe to drink, anoxic an·ox·i·a  
n.
1. Absence of oxygen.

2. A pathological deficiency of oxygen, especially hypoxia.



[an- + ox(o)- + -ia1.
 "dead zones"--areas in which virtually no plants or animals can survive--that appear each summer like clockwork, and an ever-growing population of unwanted species from other parts of the world.

The Great Catch-alls?

According to the EPA, 362 contaminants have been identified in the Great Lakes system, only about a third of which have been evaluated for their effects on wildlife and human health. Two decades ago the International Joint Commission (IJC IJC International Joint Commission
IJC Internet Journal of Chemistry
IJC International Journal of Cancer
IJC International Court of Justice
IJC Independent Journalism Centre
IJC International Journal of Climatology
IJC International Journal of Control
)--an organization that was formed by the Boundary Waters Treaty of 1909 to prevent and mediate boundary water disputes between Canada and the United States--identified 11 of these as "critical pollutants" that required immediate attention. The list includes polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), DDT DDT or 2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-1,1,1,-trichloroethane, chlorinated hydrocarbon compound used as an insecticide. First introduced during the 1940s, it killed insects that spread disease and feed on crops. , dieldrin dieldrin: see insecticides. , toxaphene toxaphene: see insecticides. , mirex mirex

an effective organic pesticide used in ant control and as a fire retardant; it is, however, very persistent in tissue and now banned because of residue problems.
, mercury, benzo[a]pyrene, hexachlorobenzene, furans, dioxins, and alkylated lead.

All of these substances bioaccumulate in organisms and persist in the environment. Joseph Makarewicz, a professor of environmental science and biology at The State University of New York at Brockport The State University of New York at Brockport, also known as SUNY Brockport, Brockport State University or the State University of New York College at Brockport, is a four-year liberal arts college located in Brockport, Monroe County, New York, near Rochester. , explains that many of these chemicals are attracted to fats and repelled by water. "They readily move into tissue," he says, "but basically it's through phytoplankton phytoplankton

Flora of freely floating, often minute organisms that drift with water currents. Like land vegetation, phytoplankton uses carbon dioxide, releases oxygen, and converts minerals to a form animals can use.
, zooplankton zooplankton: see marine biology.
zooplankton

Small floating or weakly swimming animals that drift with water currents and, with phytoplankton, make up the planktonic food supply on which almost all oceanic organisms ultimately depend (see
, forage fish ... into the various salmons and lake trout." So the amount of contaminant contaminant /con·tam·i·nant/ (kon-tam´in-int) something that causes contamination.

contaminant

something that causes contamination.
 in the water may be very small, even difficult to measure, but once it gets taken up by phytoplankton, it then biomagnifies--or becomes more concentrated--as it moves up through the food chain.

Over the past 20 years, as the American and Canadian governments have attempted to compel industries to better control or completely discontinue use of these substances, their levels in the environment have dropped. "We can demonstrate that DDT did definitely increase over the course of the fifties and sixties, peaked in the seventies, and then began to decline again," Swackhamer says. "We can show the same for PCBs." In response to the presence of these chemicals, over the years a smorgasbord of local, state, provincial, and federal public-awareness campaigns have been launched to alert citizens to the hazards of exposure to these chemicals.

The campaigns have met with mixed results. At-risk populations--those who consume large amounts of fish--are still being exposed, says Heraline E. Hicks, a senior environmental health scientist and manager of the Great Lakes Program at the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry The United States Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, (ATSDR) is an agency for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services that is directed by a congressional mandate to perform specific functions concerning the effect on public health of hazardous . That's because contamination with certain chemicals, such as PCBs, is ubiquitous in certain kinds of Great Lakes fish.

"People who are eating fish out of the Great Lakes as a major nutritional source are really getting hit hard," says Keri Hornbuckle, a University of Iowa Not to be confused with Iowa State University.
The first faculty offered instruction at the University in March 1855 to students in the Old Mechanics Building, situated where Seashore Hall is now. In September 1855, the student body numbered 124, of which, 41 were women.
 associate professor of environmental engineering. The problem, she says, is complex. Some groups of people, including low-income African Americans, Native Americans, and non-English speakers such as some Hmong immigrants, depend on the contaminated fish for their subsistence and can be hard to reach with or resistant to cautionary messages.

A suite of studies by different research groups suggest the health impacts may be profound. "We have seen changes in the sex ratio of children who were born to parents who were exposed to PCBs," says Hicks. In a January 2002 Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine study of Lake Michigan fish eaters and their children, men with blood PCB PCB: see polychlorinated biphenyl.
PCB
 in full polychlorinated biphenyl

Any of a class of highly stable organic compounds prepared by the reaction of chlorine with biphenyl, a two-ring compound.
 levels of greater than 6 parts per billion were more likely to father male children than female children. The ratio of boys to girls in this population was about 154 boys for every 100 girls, whereas the normal human sex ratio is 103 boys to every 100 girls, says Hicks. Interestingly, a study in the 12 March 2003 issue of Environmental Health also found sex ratio effects, except that maternal exposure appeared to result in more girls.

Still another study, published in the February 1999 issue of Environmental Research showed that couples in which the man had a high body burden of PCBs due to his pattern of fish consumption took longer to conceive. And research published in the December 1997 American Journal of Epidemiology hinted at still more potential reproductive effects: women who ate PCB-contaminated freshwater fish experienced a shortened menstrual cycle.

Since the U.S. EPA banned production and most uses of PCBs almost three decades ago, levels of the chemicals in lake water have declined steadily. Over the years levels of PCBs--whose primary use was in nonflammable non·flam·ma·ble
adj.
Not flammable, especially not readily ignited and not rapidly burned.
 oil for such devices as switches and electrical transformers and capacitors, as well as a lubricant--have also dropped significantly in some species. According to the EPA, typical levels of PCBs in Great Lakes lake trout during the 1970s were 22 milligrams per kilogram. By the 1980s, they had dropped to about 6 milligrams per kilogram, just slightly above current levels.

Nonetheless, PCBs continue to cycle through the environment. They are mixed into sediments on the lakes' floors, where they can be released by such disturbances as dredging or strong storms. Land sources continue to pollute as well, Hornbuckle says. The lightest of the 120 types of PCB compounds that have been found in the Great Lakes appear to remain active in the environment the longest.

And where do these long-banned compounds come from today? Hornbuckle has tracked them to industrial sites, many abandoned, surrounding the Great Lakes. Soils that were contaminated in the 1950s and 1960s in cities such as Chicago and Milwaukee appear to be an ongoing source of PCBs, she says. The chemicals volatilize vol·a·til·ize  
intr. & tr.v. vol·a·til·ized, vol·a·til·iz·ing, vol·a·til·iz·es
1. To become or make volatile.

2. To evaporate or cause to evaporate.
 on warm days, then enter the water system when blown over the lakes or the rivers and streams that feed them. Such atmospheric deposition is now the leading way PCBs are introduced into the lakes, Hornbuckle says. Plus, there are still PCBs remaining in service in older transformers and capacitors.

Mercury's effects on human and environmental health are similar to those of PCBs. Today, says Michael Murray, a staff scientist with the National Wildlife Federation, much--if not most--of the mercury entering the Great Lakes comes via atmospheric deposition. Major sources of mercury releases to the air include coal-fired power plants, incineration incineration

the act of burning to ashes.
 of mercury-containing devices, mercury cell chloralkali plants, and industrial boilers.

From the 1940s through 1960s the lakes were bombarded directly with mercury-laden industrial waste. "Dow Chemical released about four hundred tons of mercury [into Lake Superior] from two chloralkali plants that they bad," says Michael Gilbertson, who recently retired as a biologist and secretary of the Workgroup on Ecosystem Health with the IJC. The result, he says, has been an outbreak among a series of communities on the Canadian side of the Great Lakes of suspected mercury-related poisoning. Symptoms observed have included tremors, deafness, and blindness.

In an unpublished dissertation, Gilbertson wrote that a review of Canadian hospitalization records reveals that in some communities near the lakes four times as many males are being admitted with cerebral palsy as in inland areas. Gilbertson says methylmercury is the only substance known to be associated with cerebral palsy, and males are more susceptible than females to neurological damage in utero from exposure to methylmercury.

More recently developed pollutants also threaten Great Lakes fauna--possibly including humans. Some that are appearing in the environment in increasing quantities are the polybrominated diphenyl ethers Polybrominated diphenyl ethers or PBDE, are a flame retardant sub-family of the brominated flame retardant group. They have been used in a wide array of household products, including fabrics, furniture, and electronics.  (PBDEs), which were introduced in the early 1970s as flame retardants in consumer products. "No one paid any attention to these compounds until the last couple of years," says David Carpenter, a professor of environmental health and toxicology at The State University of New York (body) State University of New York - (SUNY) The public university system of New York State, USA, with campuses throughout the state.  at Albany's Institute for Health and the Environment, "and now we're just finding them everywhere."

Although PBDEs are mixed with plastic polymers during manufacturing, they don't bind chemically with the plastic. As a result, they leach readily from products that contain them. Like PCBs, PBDEs concentrate in fats. That and their resistance to degradation combine to create a persistent chemical that bioaccumulates. "Their manufacture increased exponentially over the last decade or so, and we're seeing them in fish and in sediments with that same increase," Swackhamer says. "We can go back to the sediments since we didn't measure them in the environment until a few years ago; we can actually use the sediments to go back and demonstrate the fact that they've increased exponentially all through the mid-eighties and into the nineties."

PBDEs have now been found in fish from all five of the lakes. According to a University of Wisconsin study published in the 1 March 2001 issue of Environmental Science and Technology, Lake Michigan salmon (which are an introduced species managed for sport fisheries and sustained through stocking programs) contain PBDEs at levels above 100 parts per billion, one of the world's highest concentrations for salmon in open waters. The authors also found PBDEs in some forage fish, such as alewife alewife: see herring.
alewife

Important North American food fish (Pomolobus, or Alosa, pseudoharengus) of the herring family. The alewife grows to about 1 ft (30 cm).
 and smelt. Levels of PBDEs also appear to be increasing in human tissue, according to a review published in the May 2000 issue of EHP EHP
abbr.
1. effective horsepower

2. electric horsepower
. Although the human health impacts of PBDEs aren't well understood, these chemicals have been shown in animal studies to have effects similar to those of PCBs, including effects on brain development, learning, memory, thyroid levels, and reproduction.

The sources of PBDEs are ubiquitous. "PBDEs are used everywhere--in furniture, carpeting, computers, and vehicles," says Sergei Chernyak, a research scientist in the University of Michigan (body, education) University of Michigan - A large cosmopolitan university in the Midwest USA. Over 50000 students are enrolled at the University of Michigan's three campuses. The students come from 50 states and over 100 foreign countries.  School of Public Health. To gauge the contribution of domestic sources of PBDEs to the environment, Chernyak's research team compared PBDE PBDE Polybrominated Diphenyl Ether
PBDE Pentabromodiphenyl Ether (flame retardant additive in plastics)
PBDE Parallel Block-Decodable Encoder
 levels inside and outside homes. The levels inside a typical house were 70 times the levels just outside the building. "Although this was a pilot study, it seems that houses have strong sources of these contaminants, which is a public health concern," Chernyak says.

With such a diffuse source, stemming the flow of PBDEs to the Great Lakes poses a much more difficult problem than that of PCBs, whose original sources could be traced to large industrial sites, Chernyak says. "The source to the lake came not from water nor from the shore but probably from [the air]," he says.

Such pollutants can devastate wildlife in subtle and hard-to-detect ways, says Philip Cook, a research chemist for the U.S. EPA. For example, research by Cook and colleagues published in the 1 September 2003 issue of Environmental Science and Technology indicates that the introduction of dioxins and certain related PCB compounds to Lake Ontario in the 1950s spelled the end of lake trout, the lake's top predator. "This was a finding that would contradict prevailing opinions in the Great Lakes, specifically that lake trout, which had declined to extirpation--in other words the population was gone by 1960--was due to other ecological factors, not chemical toxicity," Cook says. Exotic species, overfishing Overfishing occurs when fishing activities reduce fish stocks below an acceptable level. This can occur in any body of water from a pond to the oceans. More precise biological and bioeconomic terms define 'acceptable level'. , loss of habitat, and water quality reductions had all been blamed, he says, but "we think there is evidence to show that at least up until very recently this toxicity was a factor that impaired any success in trying to reintroduce the species."

Sewage poses still another threat to the lakes. According to the IJC's September 2004 Twelfth Biennial Report on Great Lakes Water Quality, each year rainstorms send trillions of gallons of untreated human sewage into the lakes. In 2001, Lake Michigan alone absorbed 52 billion gallons of sewage and partially treated wastewater.

With the sewage come nitrates, which can cause gastric problems and methemoglobinemia Methemoglobinemia Definition

When excessive hemoglobin in the blood is converted to another chemical that cannot deliver oxygen to tissues, called methemoglobin.
 if they find their way into drinking water in excessive amounts. It also brings any number of pathogens, including the Cryptosporidium cryptosporidium (krĭp'tōspərĭd`ēəm), genus of protozoans having at least four species; they are waterborne parasites that cause the disease cryptosporidiosis.  parasite and Escherichia coli, which can cause severe, and sometimes deadly, intestinal diseases.

Today most raw sewage contributions to the Great Lakes are inadvertent, and they most often come from overflowing sewer systems during storms. A smaller, but still significant, source of sewage is the thousands of privately owned septic systems on the farms, vacation homes, and other rural dwellings that ring the lakes, says Kathleen Halvorsen, an associate professor of natural resource policy at Michigan Technological University Michigan Technological University (abbr. Michigan Tech or MTU) is an American public university with a range of degree offerings. Michigan Tech's main campus is in Houghton, Michigan, in the Upper Peninsula. . Some 10-20% of these systems are failing, she says. Still, she adds, it's the big cities that contribute the most untreated sewage.

The Great Melting Pots?

Almost as diverse as the pollutants that have found their ways into the Great Lakes are the plants and animals Plants and Animals are a Canadian indie-rock band from Montreal, comprised of guitarist-vocalists Warren Spicer and Nic Basque, and drummer-vocalist Matthew Woodley.[1] They are signed to Secret City Records.  that now call the lakes home. The Great Lakes connect to the Atlantic through the Saint Lawrence River Saint Lawrence River

River, southern Quebec and southeastern Ontario, Canada. It flows northeast out of Lake Ontario into the Gulf of Saint Lawrence and is about 760 mi (1,225 km) long.
, which flows out of Lake Ontario. But until the early 1800s Niagara Falls, at the west end of Lake Ontario, prevented water and the animals that live in it from reaching the rest of the Great Lakes system. In the 1800s, however, two waterways--the Erie Canal and the Welland Canal--opened these lakes to the Atlantic Ocean. These new channels provided a foot in the door for invasive species, some traveling under their own power, others hitching rides aboard the ships that began plying the waters.

Since the early 1900s, 170 or so normative species have found their way into the Great Lakes, says Edward Mills, a fish ecology professor at the Cornell Biological Field Station. Some, such as the zebra mussel, stowed away on oceangoing o·cean·go·ing  
adj.
Made or used for ocean voyages.

Adj. 1. oceangoing - used on the high seas; "seafaring vessels"
seafaring, seagoing

marine - relating to or characteristic of or occurring on or in the sea
 ships. Some, such as the rusty crayfish, escaped their fate as bait for anglers. Some, such as the banded mystery snail, were liberated from home aquariums. Some, such as garden loosestrife, were cultivated. Some, such as the orange-spotted sunfish sunfish, common name for members of the family Centrachidae, comprising numerous species of spiny-finned, freshwater fishes with deep, laterally flattened bodies found in temperate North America. , swam in through man-made canals. And some, such as the rainbow trout, were introduced intentionally as game fish.

These newcomers can devastate their new homes. By 1947, for example, the sea lamprey--an eel-like fish that sucks bodily fluids from other fish--had invaded all of the lakes. The lamprey--which probably swam up the Hudson--has contributed to the collapse of whitefish whitefish: see salmon.
whitefish

Any of several silvery food fishes (family Salmonidae, or Coregonidae), inhabiting cold northern lakes of Europe, Asia, and North America.
 and lake trout fisheries. A more recent and possibly more damaging invader, the zebra mussel, arrived in the ballast water of a transoceanic vessel. Since its first Great Lakes sighting in 1988, this fingernail-sized mollusk mollusk: see Mollusca.
mollusk
 or mollusc

Any of some 75,000 species of soft-bodied invertebrate animals (phylum Mollusca), many of which are wholly or partly enclosed in a calcium carbonate shell secreted by the mantle, a soft
 has found its way into seemingly every nook and cranny Noun 1. nook and cranny - something remote; "he explored every nook and cranny of science"
nooks and crannies

detail, item, point - an isolated fact that is considered separately from the whole; "several of the details are similar"; "a point of information"
 of the lake system.

Zebra mussels and their fellow invaders, quagga mussels, are the only mollusks that can attach themselves firmly to solid objects. The solid objects they select for their colonies include cooling pipes at power plants, boat hulls, propellers, and docks, which--at mussel mussel, edible freshwater or marine bivalve mollusk. Mussels are able to move slowly by means of the muscular foot. They feed and breathe by filtering water through extensible tubes called siphons; a large mussel filters 10 gal (38 liters) of water per day.  densities of up to 70,000 per square meter--quickly become clogged and fouled. They're also radically altering the ecological balance of the lakes, Makarewicz says. The mussels are such effective filter feeders that they strip water of the various plankton plankton: see marine biology.
plankton

Marine and freshwater organisms that, because they are unable to move or are too small or too weak to swim against water currents, exist in a drifting, floating state.
 that indigenous creatures eat. In the process their fatty tissues accumulate concentrations of PCBs, methylmercury, and other contaminants at about 10 times the density of native mussels, giving the fish and waterfowl waterfowl, common term for members of the order Anseriformes, wild, aquatic, typically freshwater birds including ducks, geese, and screamers. In Great Britain the term is also used to designate species kept for ornamental purposes on private lakes or ponds, while in  that feed on them an extra shot of biomagnified poison.

In not much more than a decade, Makarewicz says, the zebra and quagga mussels have undone years of work and at least $5 billion spent on Lake Erie alone to upgrade water quality by reducing phosphates from fertilizers, detergents, and industrial discharges. "There was major improvement in all of the basins of Erie," he says. "The walleye walleye, in medicine
walleye: see strabismus.
walleye, in zoology
walleye or walleyed pike: see perch.
 populations that [fisheries] began stocking--which is a sport fish--came back in big numbers and things looked very good. And then the zebra mussels changed that." Although phosphates are largely under control, he says, invasive mussles have re-degraded the quality of the water by overclarifying it.

Zebra mussels, quagga mussels, and a fish known as the round goby have been tagged as the most likely culprits in recent type E botulism botulism (bŏch`əlĭz'əm), acute poisoning resulting from ingestion of food containing toxins produced by the bacillus Clostridium botulinum.  outbreaks in Lake Erie. "The real mechanism has not been clearly distinguished yet," Mills says, "but it does look like it's some relationship between the mussels--mostly quagga quagga (kwăg`ə), extinct type of zebra. It formerly inhabited open plains in S Africa, where its range overlapped that of the common zebra (Equus burchelli).  mussels--and gobies." The highly efficient mussels clarify the water so much that sunlight can reach normally shaded aquatic plants and promote their growth. When the unwonted proliferation of growth dies, its decay consumes oxygen, providing ideal conditions for the Clostridium botulinum bacteria to grow. The mussels also may concentrate C. batulinum, which is biomagnified when the mussels become meals for round goby. "We know gobies feed on mussels," Mills says. "The gobies then get the Clostridium clostridium

Any of the rod-shaped, usually gram-positive bacteria (see gram stain) that make up the genus Clostridium. They are found in soil, water, and the intestinal tracts of humans and other animals. Some species grow only in the complete absence of oxygen.
 bacteria toxin. They die and then whatever eats them--it could be fish or birds feeding on them as they roll in on shore--then gets the toxin and dies."

Similarly, says R. Peter Richards, a water quality hydrologist hy·drol·o·gy  
n.
The scientific study of the properties, distribution, and effects of water on the earth's surface, in the soil and underlying rocks, and in the atmosphere.
 at Ohio's Heidelberg College, zebra mussels may be the cause of recent increases in blooms of the toxic algae algae (ăl`jē) [plural of Lat. alga=seaweed], a large and diverse group of primarily aquatic plantlike organisms. These organisms were previously classified as a primitive subkingdom of the plant kingdom, the thallophytes (plants that  Microcystis. "It is at least a nuisance algae, if not a potential health problem," he says. "The zebra mussels don't like to eat Microcystis, so they suck all of the particles out of the water and they spit the Microcystis back out. At the same time they digest all the other stuff and spit it out as pseudofeces, which releases nutrients that feed the Microcystis. Zebra mussels are killing off the competition and fertilizing the Microcystis."

In spite of a 1993 rule that calls for oceangoing ships to flush their ballast tanks before entering the Great Lakes system, the influx of invasive species has actually increased. One reason may lie in the loop-hole that ships that are fully loaded with cargo, and so in theory are free of ballast water, aren't required to flush their tanks. But even "empty" ballast tanks can contain up to 10 tons of sediment and trapped water, and species can be released into the lakes as the ships unload and reload (1) To load a program from disk into memory once again in order to run it. Reload is entirely different than reinstall. Reinstall means that you have to run the install program from a CD-ROM or floppy disk and perform the installation procedure over again.  cargo.

Another reason may be the types of species that are coming in. Spiny spiny

sharp spines protrude.


spiny amaranth
amaranthusspinosum.

spiny anteater
see echidna.

spiny clotburr
xanthiumspinosum.

spiny emex
see emex australis.
 water flea spores have been identified in ballast-tank residue, and it's possible this is how this and other alien species have found their way into the lakes. In inhospital conditions, mating spiny water fleas produce "resting eggs" that are first carried in the females' brood pouches and later released to sink to lake sediments, where they lie dormant until the water warms in spring or summer. The creature's sharp spines make it impossible for all but the largest predators to eat them. Meanwhile, the spiny water flea itself competes aggressively for the plankton that so many native species depend on for food.

Flushing ballast, even if made more effective, won't control invaders that travel to the lakes through other routes, such as the Asian carp, which is knocking on the lake system's southernmost door. In an attempt to stop the voracious fish, an electrified barrier has been strung across the Chicago River, which flows out of Lake Michigan. So far Asian carp--a term used for multiple species of carp used in Southern aquaculture--have not been found in the Great Lakes. But they are less than 50 miles away on the Illinois River, where in some stretches they have become the dominant species.

Asian carp, which include bighead carp and silver carp, are thought to have escaped from U.S. fish farms during the Mississippi River floods more than 10 years ago. They are used for pet food because they quickly grow quite large. Bighead carp can weigh more than 100 pounds and because they can eat as much as 40 pounds of plankton per day, some ecologists warn that they could equal or even outdo zebra mussels in terms of how efficiently and quickly they ravage the ecosystems they invade.

In threatening native species, these invaders also reduce biodiversity, says Dora Passino-Reader, a USGS fishery research biologist. Zebra mussels, for example, reproduce so quickly, are so hardy, and (for a mussel) are so aggressive--as many as 10,000 have been found affixed to the shell of one native mussel--that they suppress native mussels' movement, feeding, and reproductive behavior. To take another example, several species of cisco, which were already depressed by the mid twentieth century by overfishing, were then dealt the final blow by three exotic species--the parasitic sea lamprey lamprey, name for several primitive marine and freshwater fishes of the order Cyclostomata, or jawless fishes (see cyclostome). As in the other member of the order, the hagfish, the adult lamprey retains the notochord, the supporting structure that in higher , a predator, and the alewife and rainbow smelt, competitors. "Some of these species have disappeared," says Passino-Reader. "[Ciscoes are] not located in the Great Lakes at all anymore. They aren't able to live in the Great Lakes after the invasion of the alewife. The competition and predators have changed so much that these species have actually been lost." Alewife are also high in the enzyme thiaminase, she says, which breaks down vitamin [B.sub.1] (thiamine) and Contributes to mortality in the offspring of the alewife's predators.

Although programs to eliminate sources of known pollutants--notably PCBs, DDT, and mercury--have largely stemmed the flow of these substances into the lakes, foreign species have proven more stubborn, Mills says. "When these species get in, it's pretty much irreversible," he says. "From the chemical side of things, once you control a nasty chemical you have some hope that the system will respond, and usually it responds quite quickly. But on the biological side of things, very rarely does an invasive species go extinct. The system has to change very dramatically for that to happen."

Invasive species are not the only cause of the Great Lakes' biodiversity woes, however. According to Lucinda Johnson, associate director of the University of Minnesota's Center for Water and the Environment, the Great Lakes system's coastal marshes, sand dunes, rocky shorelines, prairies, savannas, and forests--and the creatures that live in them--are being displaced by human development. For example, coastal marshes, which house an estimated 30% of Great Lakes species, are also a frequent victim of development itself as well as the fallout from development: toxic runoff rich in road salt and sediment. As the large cities that ring the Great Lakes continue to grow, sprawl fallout such as subdivisions, roads, golf courses, and vacation homes poses an ever-increasing threat to Great Lakes ecosystems.

The Great Warm-up?

Recent weather trends over the Great Lakes have included decreased precipitation, higher-than-usual air temperatures, and less ice cover in winter. As a result of these influences, water levels in Lake Michigan and Lake Huron dropped faster from 1998 to 2002 than during any other recorded period, according to research from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Noun 1. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration - an agency in the Department of Commerce that maps the oceans and conserves their living resources; predicts changes to the earth's environment; provides weather reports and forecasts floods and hurricanes and  (NOAA NOAA
abbr.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Noun 1. NOAA - an agency in the Department of Commerce that maps the oceans and conserves their living resources; predicts changes to the earth's environment;
) published in the August 2004 Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society is a publication of the American Meteorological Society. The official organ of the society, devoted to editorials, topical reports to members, articles, professional and membership news, conference announcements, programs and . In recent years Lake Superior has been at its lowest level since 1926, Lake Erie hasn't been as low since 1966, and Lakes Michigan and Huron are at their lowest levels since 1965.

Some environmentalists have pointed to these alarmingly low water levels as evidence of global warming. But, says Douglas Wilcox, branch chief for coastal and wetland ecology at the USGS Great Lakes Science Center The Great Lakes Science Center is a museum and educational facility in downtown Cleveland, Ohio, United States.

The center's exhibits focus on helping visitors to understand science, technology, and their interdependence with the environment.
, the current low levels are still within the realm of low lake levels on the upper lakes that have been seen through recorded and even prerecorded pre·re·cord  
tr.v. pre·re·cord·ed, pre·re·cord·ing, pre·re·cords
To record (a television program, for example) at an earlier time for later presentation or use.

Adj. 1.
 history. Wilcox says the long-term data suggest we could be entering a longer-term warming cycle with a naturally resulting long-term low lake level cycle. "On the other hand," he says, "if you throw in anthropogenic an·thro·po·gen·ic  
adj.
1. Of or relating to anthropogenesis.

2. Caused by humans: anthropogenic degradation of the environment.
 warming on top of that natural cycle, maybe the low lake level that will occur seventy-five or a hundred years from now--when the low cycle occurs again--may be much lower than it would have been naturally if it hadn't been for human impacts."

Low lake levels are necessary, Wilcox explains, for natural restoration of lake wetland ecosystems. During low water levels, sediments are exposed allowing other lake plants to germinate and grow. The resulting wetlands provide habitat for species such as frogs and wading birds. But for people who depend on the lakes for their livelihood, lower water means lower profits. In 2000, for example, lake carriers, which move such cargo as ore, coal, and grain within the lake system, had to reduce their loads by 5-8%, according to a 2004 NOAA brochure titled "Water Levels of the Great Lakes." Sustained low water periods invariably in·var·i·a·ble  
adj.
Not changing or subject to change; constant.



in·vari·a·bil
 bring with them political pressure to deepen shipping channels and harbors, says Emily Green, the Sierra Club's Great Lakes program director. But dredging in these lakes can mean releasing pollutants that have settled into lake bed sediments.

Hornbuckle says the Great Lakes' infamous violent storms can resuspend Verb 1. resuspend - put back into suspension; "resuspend particles"
chemical science, chemistry - the science of matter; the branch of the natural sciences dealing with the composition of substances and their properties and reactions
 PCBs and DDT compounds that have settled into sediments. And with climate change, Johnson says, have come more of the violent storms, and storms that are more violent than before. "There has been a doubling over the last century in the number and intensity of storm events, and those [trends] are expected to hold into the next century," she says. "The prediction is that there will be an additional doubling of intense storm events." The effects of these powerful storms, she says, will be magnified by increasing human development--with its destruction of wetlands and addition of impervious surfaces, such as roads and sidewalks--in the lakes' watershed. This, she says, is a recipe for increased lakeshore erosion, water turbidity turbidity /tur·bid·i·ty/ (ter-bid´i-te) cloudiness; disturbance of solids (sediment) in a solution, so that it is not clear.tur´bid
Turbidity
The cloudiness or lack of transparency of a solution.
, and resuspension Noun 1. resuspension - a renewed suspension of insoluble particles after they have been precipitated
suspension - a mixture in which fine particles are suspended in a fluid where they are supported by buoyancy
 of sediments.

R. Michael McKay, a biology professor at Bowling Green State University Bowling Green State University, at Bowling Green, Ohio; coeducational; chartered 1910 as a normal school, opened 1914. It became a college in 1929, a university in 1935. , says plummeting water levels would also worsen another ongoing problem: dead zones. Lake Erie, for example, has periodically suffered bouts of anoxia Anoxia Definition

Anoxia is a condition characterized by an absence of oxygen supply to an organ or a tissue.
Description

Anoxia results when oxygen is not being delivered to a part of the body.
. Naturally occurring ridges, or "sills," divide the lake into three basins. Many summers nearly all of the dissolved oxygen in the central basin is consumed, dooming those creatures that cannot escape to the west or east. "Because of thermal stratification in summer there is no way of getting new oxygen down into the bottom water," McKay says.

A Great Future?

A number of programs are under way to address problems in the Great Lakes [for in-depth coverage of these programs, see "The Great Lakes: Awash in Policy," p. A174 this issue]. Perhaps some stressors on the Great Lakes can be mitigated, but others are here for the long haul, Cook says. "Once you pollute the Great Lakes it takes a long, long time for these very persistent chemicals to clear from the system so that levels can return to presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 noneffect levels," he says.

[GRAPHIC OMITTED]
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Title Annotation:Focus
Author:Fields, Scott
Publication:Environmental Health Perspectives
Date:Mar 1, 2005
Words:4684
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