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Old 01-07-2008, 10:20 PM posted to rec.ponds.moderated
LeahMarie LeahMarie is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Jun 2007
Posts: 9
Default algae bloom threatens Olympics

On Jul 1, 7:08 am, Phyllis and Jim wrote:
I would be really discouraged by that much of a bloom!..I am thinking
about how our blooms grow in response to nutrients. Will pulling it
off the sea make it go away? Seems to me the answer is negative.

New algae will form as long as there are nutrients.

They can hope to pull it off faster than it can form. That is a move
ponders know.

Will blocking an area keep algae out of it? Drifting clumps, yes.
Growing clumps, no.

The Chinese bloom seem thick, so pulling them off will help. It will
be interesting seeing how the race works out. The present thick algae
is clearly too thick for the boats. Maybe they can pull it and keep
pulling enough to have the events.

Jim


Seems to me, they will lose. Even if they use some sort of algaecide,
the downside of doing that seems worse than the algae bloom. I have a
nice bloom going in my 'new' pond and I know it will soon be gone if I
just leave it alone. But if they are dumping sewage (nutrients for
algae) from tens of thousands of residents, into the water, it's a
losing battle for them.
W. Dale