×

New dataset shows Northeast Michigan lakes changing color

Courtesy Photo/Simon Topp A composite image of lakes Michigan, Huron and Superior from 1984 to 1990.

ALPENA — A new study shows that Northeast Michigan’s lakes have been changing color since the late 1980s, but researchers don’t know exactly why.

The NASA-funded study of lake color changes over the last 36 years has given scientists the widest-ever view of America’s freshwater resources.

The open access dataset shows in part that Northeast Michigan’s lakes, including Lake Huron, have been getting bluer.

Simon Topp, the lead author of the study and a doctoral researcher at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said there could be many reasons for the gradual change.

“That could definitely be due to a reduction of nutrient inputs because of policies like the Clean Water Act; It could be due to invasive zebra mussels,” Topp said. “There’s a variety of drivers that might be causing that, but overall we can kind of take that as a first step.”

Courtesy Photo/Simon Topp A composite image of lakes Michigan, Huron and Superior from 2014 to 2020.

Lake color usually changes from season to season, but the changes that the region’s lakes have seen over time are more long-lasting.

“On average in Michigan, in the spring — so in like May and June — we’re generally seeing bluer observations over time,” Topp said. “Thirty years ago, the lakes were typically kind of greener in the May/June period where we’d typically see spring algal blooms.”

Topp said the study, which was authored by a group of scientists from universities across the country, can be used by anyone as a jumping-off point for their own analysis.

“The study went hand-in-hand with a public database that now anybody can use to say, look at their local lake without having to go in and pull and analyze all of the remote sensing data themselves,” Topp said.

The dataset includes detailed remote sensing analysis of more than 26,000 lakes.

The data can be found at the American Geophysical Union’s website: agu.org.

This story is part of the Michigan News Group internship. A collaboration between WCMU and eight newspapers, including the Alpena News. Read more at TheAlpenaNews.com and wcmu.org/alpenanews.

Newsletter

Today's breaking news and more in your inbox

I'm interested in (please check all that apply)
Are you a paying subscriber to the newspaper? *
   

Starting at $4.62/week.

Subscribe Today