U of M Announces New Great Lakes Water Center

ANN ARBOR — A new $9 million University of Michigan Great Lakes research and education center will guide efforts to protect and restore the world’s largest group of freshwater lakes by reducing toxic contamination, combating invasive species, protecting wildlife habitat and promoting coastal health. Michigan Sea Grant will be involved in the effort.

With a $4.5 million, three-year grant from the Fred A. and Barbara M. Erb Family Foundation, the new University of Michigan Water Center will provide a solid scientific framework for more efficient and effective Great Lakes restoration.

U-M scientists and their partners across the region will use research and on-the-ground collaboration to inform Great Lakes restoration projects. The initiative was announced today by U-M President Mary Sue Coleman, who said the university will add an additional $4.5 million to the project over three years.

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Coho Salmon in the Grand River (Grand Rapids, Michigan)

Raw footage from the fish ladder on the Grand River at Sixth Street Dam in Grand Rapids. Most of the fish are coho salmon headed upstream from Lake Michigan to the Lansing area. A brown trout also makes an appearance in the middle of the video.

This footage was taken on September 17, 2012. Low, clear water from a lack of rain made visibility much greater than usual on the Grand.

To see more videos like this, visit our YouTube Channel.

Lake Michigan Trails Conference

The Lake Michigan Trails conference is scheduled for Nov. 8-9 in Saugatuck, Mich. The conference attendees will share expertise, data and vision while providing a unified approach
to water trail planning and implementation, building trails and bike routes, and reconstituting the Lake Michigan Circle Tour based on economic development and tourism connections.

Federal, State, Regional, County, and local recreation, tourism, and economic development professionals, trail users and trail groups interested in the creation of a sea kayak route around the shore of Lake Michigan, and the extension and completion of U.S. Bicycle Routes should plan to attend.

The event is free and includes two lunches and conference materials.

Registration is required.

See: More Information

 

Webinar: Invasive Species Management and Clean Marina Best Practices

Marinas, boaters and stakeholders from around the country are invited to learn about best management practices for preventing the spread of aquatic invasive species (AIS) during a Clean Marina Webinar scheduled for 2-3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 7.

This is the third webinar in a series of workshops to support Clean Marina programs in the Great Lakes region, hosted by Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin Sea Grant programs. The webinar is free, but you must pre-register by November 6. Once registered, you will receive a confirmation email with log-in information.

Attendees will learn about:
• Potential environmental impacts of boat cleaning for AIS
• Best practices for managing transport and reporting of AIS at marinas and boatyards
• State requirements within the Great Lakes region
• Online resources available for marinas and boaters
• Management options for boat cleaning at marinas and boatyards
• How to engage boaters in the prevention of AIS, including boat cleaning best practices

See: Event Details

Great Lakes Stewardship Initiative Place-based Education Conference

The 2nd Annual Great Lakes Stewardship Initiative Conference, a Great Lakes Basin-wide gathering on place-based education, is scheduled for Nov. 13-14 in Lansing. The meeting will bring together practitioners and teachers from formal and non-formal education, local partners from communities across the region, and other organizations that provide vital leadership and resources to the cause of developing environmental stewards of the Great Lakes and its ecosystems.

Michigan Sea Grant will host two presentations — one on place-based education opportunities using case studies from northeast Michigan, and another on the 4-H Great Lakes and Natural Resources Camp, a summer place-based learning opportunity for youth and educators.

The two-day conference additionally features keynote speakers, presentations about promising practices, panel discussions, forums for communities of practice, access to resources about place-based education, and many opportunities to network.

See: Conference Details and Registration

Loons and other waterfowl impacted by Type E botulism

Waterfowl carcasses in Northwest Michigan have raised concerns for significant waterbird loss due to avian botulism. Citizens are encouraged to report sick or dead waterbirds as specimen collection continues.

By Mark Breederland, Michigan Sea Grant Extension. Originally published by MSU Extension.

Waterfowl carcasses in Northwest Michigan have raised concerns for significant waterbird loss due to avian botulism.

Reports of waterfowl carcasses washing ashore in Leelanau and Benzie counties has increased significantly over the past week. At least 100 loons have been discovered, along with smaller numbers of grebes, white-winged scoters, long-tailed ducks, double-crested cormorants and mergansers.

Michigan Sea Grant collected grebe and cormorant specimens in late September from Leland Township that were later confirmed positive for Type E botulism by the Michigan DNR Wildlife Disease Lab.

Botulism is a neuromuscular disease caused by the bacterium Clostridium botulinum. In the Great Lakes, botulism spores (the resting stage of the bacteria) are abundant in anaerobic habitats, such as soils, and aquatic sediments of many lakes. When the correct environmental factors are present, the spores germinate and begin vegetative growth of the toxin-producing bacterial cells. The toxin probably then is passed through quagga and zebra mussels and into round goby fish, which can become paralyzed and are easily consumed by loons and other waterfowl.

In November 2006 and 2007, an estimated 2,900 waterbirds and 7,500 waterbirds, respectively, died in northern Lake Michigan. The birds were poisoned by eating fish that carried the toxin. In recent years, there were low botulism kills.

During the high-kill years, most birds were impacted from mid-October through mid-November, so we may be in the peak of the impact season as the fall migration continues.

Observers should report sightings of sick or dead birds to the Michigan DNR wildlife disease reporting system.

See the avian botulism page for more information or contact Mark Breederland, Michigan Sea Grant Extension at (231) 922-4628.

Seeking Wicked Problems

Michigan Sea Grant would like your input to shape our next request for proposals (RFP).

At the heart of the Michigan Sea Grant research program are integrated assessment projects that tackle “wicked problems.” What makes a problem “wicked”? These are particularly complex environmental issues that are challenging to address because we lack a clear understanding of the underlying cause(s). Without a clear understanding of cause, it is impossible to identify the best corrective action.

Our Research Program

Michigan Sea Grant’s research process supports projects that bring stakeholders and a multi-disciplinary research team together to clarify the “wicked” environmental issues, including the history, causes and consequences. Together, research teams and stakeholders identify and evaluate options for addressing the problem. The research teams then develop usable and accessible information and tools to guide decision-making related to the problem.

Your Input Needed

Michigan Sea Grant would like your input. Perhaps you know of a coastal resource issue that has resisted solution for some time? For instance, multiple groups — often with opposing perspectives on an issue — are seeking different solutions to the problem and make it challenging for authoritative agencies to implement a solution. If so, we would like to hear about it.

Michigan Sea Grant is seeking ideas for projects in four focus areas:

  • Healthy Coastal Ecosystems: This focus area encompasses fish, wildlife and their habitats.
  • Sustainable Fisheries and Aquaculture: This focus area addresses recreational and commercial fisheries, commercial aquaculture, from an economic and ecological perspective.
  • Resilient Communities and Economies: In this focus area, we support sustainable development in coastal communities and community preparedness for coastal hazards that affect both individuals, e.g., dangerous currents, and community infrastructure, e.g., extreme lake levels or coastal storms.
  • Environmental Literacy and Workforce Development: Work in this areas focuses on stimulating interest in science, technology and math through the lens of the Great Lakes in order build a literate workforce, a competitive state and region, and a knowledgeable electorate.

Submit Your Ideas

If you have an idea for Michigan Sea Grant, please provide a synopsis and contact information for an agency or organization with decision-making authority related to the issue. Please send the information by Oct. 30 to Jennifer Read, Research Program Coordinator: jenread@umich.edu, 734.936.3622.

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New Coastal Tourism Guide Available

Michigan Sea Grant recently released Sustainable Coastal Tourism Development in Northeast Michigan, a guide designed to help tourism operators, resource managers, and community leaders work together to balance preservation of cultural and natural resources while expanding tourism and economic development in natural resource-rich areas.

The guide provides basic information about the coastal tourism industry, stakeholder profiles, recommendations for building a sustainable approach to tourism development, and best practice case studies of northeast Michigan partners.

Read the Michigan State University Extension release for more information.

Annual Grand Traverse Bay Freshwater Summit: Our Changing Great Lakes

The Grand Traverse Bay Annual Freshwater Summit is back for a fifth year. This year’s event will be held on Friday, October 26 from 9 a.m. to 4:15 p.m. at the Hagerty Center in Traverse City.

The theme of the 5th Annual Freshwater Summit is Our Changing Great Lakes. Highlights include:

  • Dave Ulrich, Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Cities Initiative — Change the Great Lakes for the Better
  • Ralph Bednarz, Michigan DEQ — Lakes Assessment Survey
  • Guy Meadows, Ph.D., Great Lakes Research Center — Secrets Beneath Lake Huron
  • Dr. Dave Hyndman, MSU — Grand Traverse Bay Watershed Climate Change (Michigan Sea Grant-funded research project)
  • Matt Herbert, The Nature Conservancy and Randy Claramunt, MDNR — Restoring Critical Fish Spawning Reefs

Preregistering by Oct. 16 is encouraged as space may sell out. The cost is $30 and includes lunch.

If your lake association is a member of the Network of Lake Associations, you can send two representatives free, but you must register all names by October 16 with Denise Baker at dbaker@gtbay.org.

Register online here.
See more details here.

Natural Shoreline Educator Training Workshop

Michigan Natural Shoreline Partnership and Huron Pines are hosting a day-long workshop Thursday, Oct. 25 focused on creating community leaders in sustainable and natural shorelines.

Participants will acquire the teaching tools, resources and leadership skills they need to facilitate shoreline preservation and protection in their communities. By completing the workshop, participants become part of the Michigan Natural Shoreline Partnership network, joining a growing group of citizens interested in shoreline protection across the state.

Registration deadline is Oct. 18. Cost is $75. The workshop will be held from 8:30 a.m.- 4 p.m. at the Oakland County Executive Office Building Conference Center in Waterford.

See the Huron Pines announcement for more details.