
Climate change major driver of surging algae levels in Canada’s lakes: study
TORONTO — A study of dozens of Canadian lakes suggests global warming is the major driver of surging algae levels, raising questions about the health of a sizable chunk of Earth’s freshwater as temperatures continue to climb.
Average algae levels have spiked seven-fold since around the 1960s compared to the previous century, according to a study of 80 lakes across Canada.
Those changes were more pronounced in lakes near human impacts on the environment but were still seen far away from farms, mines and forestry, the study said.
“Even lakes in pristine catchments are vulnerable to change,” said the study, published last month in Communications Earth and Environment.