-
Two decades of study reveals a complex combination of factors causing large cyanobacterial blooms and their toxicity. Government incentives to reduce nutrient pollution from farms have not been enough to solve the problem so far.
-
Researchers are studying how much of cyanobacterial toxins become airborne. They say breathing in the toxins is much worse than ingesting them.
-
Harmful algal blooms are forming in some parts of Lake Erie earlier than they typically do.
-
Annual blooms of toxic cyanobacteria on western Lake Erie shouldn't be quite as bad this year.Scientists from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric…