Region: Asia      US   Europe   India   Australia
You are not logged in    Login
IDS Water
The Information Resource for the Water Industry!
Browse Water Products and Suppliers by Category
Browse Water Whitepapers By Sector
Browse Water Events By Category
Participation Options 1
Free Listing
Interested in Exhibiting?
SubmitEvents
About IDS Water
Submit News
Subscribe to Water Newsletter
News ReleaseClick Here to view News Releases
Water Quality Problem? Remove the Water
News Source
starTribune.com
July 16, 2008
Click HereView Participation Packages
Click Here
Submit News
   




   

Water will start draining from Anderson Lakes in August in an experiment to kill off invasive pondweed.

A widely watched experiment in natural lake-weed control will begin in early August with the draining of two of the three Anderson Lakes near Hwy. 169 in Eden Prairie.

The goal is to rid the lakes of curly-leaf pondweed and reduce the phosphorous that feeds the algae, which turns the lake water pea green.

The success of the chemical-free weed treatment will depend in part on the coming winter. With the water gone, officials are counting on a dry, cold winter to freeze and kill the weeds in the lakebed - delivering cheaper, longer-lasting results than dousing the lakes with herbicides.

The Nine Mile Creek Watershed District will remove the stops from a lake-level-control structure and allow the lakes to drain by gravity into Nine Mile Creek, said watershed district administrator Kevin Bigalke.

The lake level will probably drop by about 18 inches after the plug is pulled. In late August or early September the district will begin using electric pumps to remove as much of the remaining water as possible.

In the northwest lake, 18 to 19 acres of water will be left in the eastern bay as a concession to nine Bloomington homeowners with lakeshore property. Chemicals will be used to kill the weeds in that part of the lake, Bigalke said. The residents have given their consent.

Curly-leaf pondweed - a non-native plant with jointed stems, floating leaves and greenish flowers - covers 45 to 50 percent of the two lakes. The plant has been growing in Minnesota for 100 years, according to the Department of Natural Resources.

In a growing cycle out of sync with native plants, it's the first thing up in the spring and first to die in July - leaving vegetative tangles on the water surface that block light to native plants and then decompose quickly in the heat, adding phosphorous to the lake. Algae thrive on the phosphorous, turning the lake pea green.

Other News
Sell-Amino Trimethylene Phosphonic Acid (ATMP)
ICOM Highlights Importance of Good Water Treatment
Chongqing ZN Oil Purifier & Oil Recycling Co., Ltd.
MIOX Selected by AlwaysOn as a GoingGreen Top 100 Winner
Q2 Technologies, LLC Announces Acquisition of the Assets of Adapco Environmental Solutions
Featured Whitepaper
Removing Solids with Automatic Self-Cleaning Filters

The “art” of filtration utilizes many methods for separating solid particles from f...

                     Read more

 

Industry IDS Inc.
Global Water Intelligence International Desalination Association Water Supply & Sanitation Collaborative Council
DELEGATES
55796
Conference Sectors  Case Studies  List of Papers  Exhibition Sectors  Vendor Presentation  List of Exhibitors  Industry News  Sponsors  All Exhibitors  All Papers  Sitemap  Registration Links ]

 :: IDS Emergency Management :: IDS Packaging ::IDS Publishing / Media::IDS Healthcare Management::IDS Environment::IDS Plastics::IDS Power/Energy:: 

Industry IDS, Inc. – Online Tradeshow, Exhibition, & Buyers Guide Solutions