Home > Explore News > Harmful Algal Bloom Symposium Highlights NCCOS Success in Lower Great Lakes

Harmful Algal Bloom Symposium Highlights NCCOS Success in Lower Great Lakes

Published on: 11/04/2013
Primary Contact(s): marc.suddleson@noaa.gov

Last month's "Seventh Symposium on Harmful Algae in the U.S." held in Sarasota, Fla., highlighted an NCCOS project that developed an integrated alert system to monitor and detect toxic cyanobacteria blooms in Lake Erie, Lake Ontario, and Lake Champlain.

MERHAB LGL investigator sampling Lake Ontario.

MERHAB LGL investigator sampling in Lake Ontario. Credit: G. Boyer, SUNY -ESF.

The Monitoring and Event Response for Harmful Algal Blooms Program in the Lower Great Lakes (MERHAB LGL) project, which was funded by NCCOS from 2002 to 2008, organized six different working groups, each with their own tasks: cyanobacteria monitoring, toxin chemistry, new detection methods, hydrodynamic modeling, remote sensing, and outreach.

This tier-based system continued after NCCOS funding ended, and the project remains active in all three lakes. Further, the project established a regional toxin analysis service at the State University of New York -College of Environmental Science and Forestry (SUNY -ESF). The MERHAB LGL laboratory continues to assist local, state, and federal investigators and monitoring agencies throughout the Great Lakes region. Agencies often submit water samples for cyanobacterial toxicity analysis and use the lab's results to minimize the impacts of toxic algal blooms.

For more information, contact Marc.Suddleson@noaa.gov.

Explore Similar News

About NCCOS

NCCOS delivers ecosystem science solutions for stewardship of the nation’s ocean and coastal resources to sustain thriving coastal communities and economies.

Stay Connected

Sign up for our quarterly newsletter or view our archives.

NCCOS Multimedia

Visit our new NCCOS Multimedia Gallery. 

Follow us on Social

Listen to our Podcast

Check out our new podcast "Coastal Conversations"