Long a threat to southern Ontario lakes, climate change is allowing cyanobacteria, also known as blue-green algae, to thrive in even the coldest of the Great Lakes. Read the full story by The Narwhal.
Great Lakes Daily News
Latest Daily News
- Scientists wonder if Lake Superior can continue to avoid an invasion of mussels
- More than 2 dozen waterspouts seen on Great Lakes. Why there were so many on Sunday
- Lake Superior girl’s message in a bottle washes ashore in North Carolina — returns home 20 years later
- Prairie above, forest below: Tawas Lake is home to Michigan’s largest wild rice bed
- Opponents and supporters working to influence EGLE permits decisions on Enbridge Line 5 tunnel proposal
- How many cigarette butts are littering your local beach?
- Forestry company cancels plans to spray herbicides over Crown land along Lake Huron’s north shore
- COMMENTARY: Let’s both celebrate – and worry about – our Great Lakes on World Lake Day
- Data centers will tax Great Lakes water resources, report warns
- How climate change is driving shoreline erosion on Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River
- Two historic lighthouses in Duluth could be open for tours in the next few years
- A Wisconsin shipwreck was lost for 138 years until a boater spotted something unusual