Water resources are of prime importance at Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore. The park's science staff conduct annual inventory and monitoring projects to assess the overall condition of the park's inland lakes. By accumulating baseline data over many years, scientists can better understand each lake's natural features and therefore recognize changes when they happen – particularly human-caused changes that might require management action.
Continued monitoring will help staff separate trends that might arise from human origins (such as climate change, acid rain, invasive species, nutrient run-off, impacts from high recreational use, and chemical contaminants) from natural fluctuations.
Since 2007, Pictured Rocks has been part of a regional Great Lakes Network Water Quality Monitoring Protocol for Inland Lakes. Five lakes – Beaver, Legion, Chapel, Miners and Grand Sable – are tested annually for many chemical and physical parameters, including temperature, pH, dissolved oxygen, conductivity, clarity, productivity, and water level. A sixth lake, Trappers, was added in 2012.
Studies have revealed that each lake is completely unique, with its own character and natural features. Chapel Lake is extremely deep and isolated, while Beaver Lake, which was once part of Lake Superior, is shallow and sandy. Legion Lake is quite acidic and more "bog-like" compared to the others. Miners Lake is the most nutrient rich; Grand Sable is the least.
Toxic algal blooms are becoming more common throughout the Great Lakes. Though no visible surface blooms have occurred at Pictured Rocks, lakes adjacent to backcountry campsites are being tested for algal toxins as a precautionary measure.
As part of the Great Lakes Network, Pictured Rocks and other national park sites use the same testing protocols so that results may be analyzed not only for each individual park but for the Great Lakes region as a whole. The results will allow researchers to detect changes and trends on a much larger scale.
Other Studies
In addition to inland lake studies, the park also monitors the condition of several pristine cold-water streams, which includes measuring stream flow and taking inventory of insect larvae. The presence of caddisfly, stonefly and mayfly larvae indicate that streams here are of high quality and are in good ecological health.
Pictured Rocks is one of several parks involved in a regional Great Lakes Network study to detect the presence of mercury in aquatic environments by sampling dragonfly larvae. Information from this project will help scientists assess how mercury in northern lakes spreads throughout the aquatic food web.
In 2013 an inventory was made of the national lakeshore's vernal pools, which are small seasonal pools that fill in spring and fall and dry up in the summer. Vernal pools lack fish, which make them prime habitat for breeding amphibians and other fish-intolerant species such as fairy shrimp. Locating and mapping these pools will help staff better understand their ecological function and identify potential threats.
Pictured Rocks was included in a recent Great Lakes Network project to study diatoms in lake core samples. Diatoms are a class of algae that include silica in their cell walls. When diatoms die, the silica sinks to the lake bottom where it is preserved like tiny bits of glass. Using a core of lake bottom sediments, researchers can identify the diatom species that were present at different times in the past. Since particular diatom species only exist under certain conditions, they provide a historic record of changes in the lake and serve as water quality indicators.
The long cores showed large and consistent changes across lakes around the time of Euro-American settlement. As settlement occurred in the late 1800s, increases in agriculture and logging caused changes in water quality, which led to changes in the diatom community. In general, the cores showed increases in sedimentation rates and inorganic content, likely a result of accelerated rates of erosion due to land clearance, changes in runoff, and possible changes in lake levels.
The long cores also showed a shift in the diatom composition in the 1950s to the 2000s, with many lakes showing change in the 1970s to 1980s. These changes cannot be easily ascribed to known land use changes, but may instead be related to climate change. Climate-linked mechanisms of recent ecological change include shorter duration of ice cover, leading to earlier warming of surface water and longer growing seasons; and increased frequency or intensity of summer storms, which may increase the availability of nutrients when lake waters mix more frequently or nutrients are washed into the lakes from the surrounding landscape. Collecting surface sediments (the top few cm) is a method used to assess recent (approx. 3-5 yrs.) changes in diatom communities. This is part of GLKN’s long-term monitoring program, with each lake scheduled for sampling on a 3-5 year rotation. Thus, it will take many years before trends in diatom species, and hence water quality characteristics, will be detected.
Enhancement Through Youth Leadership
This summer, two interns joined the Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore team through Scientists in Parks program in order to assist with ecological work. During their time here they worked alongside the aquatics team to assess water quality. This was done through the installation and calibration of passive continuous sondes, a kind of probe which collects long term water quality data. They also aided in the collection of aquatic macroinverterates (dragonfly larvae, aquatic beetles, etc.) for identification and assessment. This data will be used to monitor the current health of our inland lakes and streams and to identify long-term ecological impacts such as climate change, road maintenance, and other activities outside park boundaries but within the watershed.
In addition to their work with the aquatic resources team, the interns helped to map and assess vernal pools, seasonally flooded wetland features that provide breeding habitat for amphibians, insects, and other wetland creatures. This included recording temperature, size, and the presence of indicator species, environmentally sensitive creatures whose presence or absence gives insight to the health of the habitat. This data and the collection methods have been recorded in order to further the park's goal to join the Michigan Vernal Pool Partnership in the coming years. For more information, visit Michigan Vernal Pools Partnership (mivernalpools.com).
During their time here, our interns also developed a program for the Youth Conservation Corps (YCC). Through this program, students experienced data collection and gained an understanding of the importance of macroinvertebrates in monitoring the water quality of our rivers and streams. Macroinvertebrate families such as caddisflies, stoneflies, and mayflies are pollutant sensitive and are coined "ecological indicators" of stream health. These species typically will not be found in streams where there are impaired conditions, so stream health can be assessed by conducting surveys to see which macroinvertebrate species are present. YCC students had the opportunity to visit Hurricane River and conduct macroinvertebrate surveys, identify the species they found, and subsequently understand more about the stream health of Hurricane River from the macroinvertebrates they collected.
This experience will work to familiarize and educate the youth to macroinvertebrate communities prior to the more stringent protocol of the Dragonfly Mercury Project (DMP), as the YCC has been involved in sampling efforts to help collect data in the field since 2013. Volunteers work with park staff to bag, measure, and record the dragonfly samples which are then sent to the U.S. Geological Survey laboratory. The Dragonfly Mercury Project provides data on mercury contamination and risk, as well as assessing how successful mercury emission reduction programs and policies are. For more information, visit About the Dragonfly Mercury Project (U.S. National Park Service) (nps.gov).