According to a study by the Michigan Tech Research Institute, Lake Michigan has dramatically increased in clarity since 1998, the Chicago Tribune reports. The reason? Researchers say the introduction of mussels, one of the biggest invasive species in the Great Lakes.
Researchers from the Michigan Tech Research Institute compared satellite images of lakes Michigan, Huron
“Clearer is not necessarily better,” Robert Shuchman, co-director of the Michigan Tech Research Institute, told the Chicago Tribune. “Clearer water means less phytoplankton in the water column, and they’re the basic building block in the food web. The idea is, the little fish eat algae, and the bigger fish eat the little fish.
Some environmentalists worry that mussels, in filtering the lake water, have decimated the phytoplankton population, thus threatening the entire food chain, ecosystem and $7 billion fishing industry. Researchers say they will have to monitor the mussel population to better predict what will happen in the future.
Read the full article here.
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