Bacteria identified at another Ohio park lake

A private lab has identified the blue-green algae found at an Ohio park in Pickaway County near Circleville as cyanobacteria and the state is advising visitors to limit contact with the water.

Boaters and swimmers should avoid swallowing lake water, and swimmers should shower after leaving the Deer Creek Lake in Deer Creek State Park, said Heidi Hetzel-Evans, a spokeswoman for the Ohio Department of Natural Resources on Tuesday, Aug. 17.

To date, the state has identified 10 lakes, not including a golf course pond at Shawnee State Park, as being under algae bloom advisories.

BSA Environmental Services in Beachwood, Ohio, has identified the organism in the 1,277-acre Deer Creek Lake as Planktothrix, a cyanobacteria that can produce toxins. Additional samples were taken at Deer Creek. The results will be reported when they become available, ODNR said.

Summary of advisories:

No Contact Advisory: Avoid any and all contact with and ingestion of the lake water. This includes launching watercraft on the lakes.

  • Grand Lake St. Marys
  • Blue Rock State Park

Toxin Advisory: Avoid contact with any algae and direct contact with water.

  • Burr Oak State Park

Bloom Advisory: Cautionary advisory to avoid contact with any algae.

  • Deer Creek State Park
  • Dillon State Park
  • East Harbor State Park (Lake Erie bloom)
  • Lake Hope
  • Lake Loramie
  • West Branch State Park
  • Shawnee State Park (golf course pond)
  • Maumee Bay State Park (Lake Erie bloom)

More information about what each advisory means can be found on ODNR's website at ohiodnr.com/tabid/22957/Default.aspx

Because toxin levels can fluctuate, the state will continue sampling from the lakes.

Advisories will remain in effect until there have been two consecutive weeks of non-detection for anatoxin-a, saxitoxin and cylindrospermopsin and two consecutive weeks of microcystin below 20 ppb (set by the World Health Organization as the upper end of the moderate-risk range for contact with microcystin). There are no WHO standards for the other toxins.

Additional information and data on harmful algal blooms is available online at www.epa.ohio.gov/dsw/HAB.aspx or www.odh.ohio.gov/features/odhfeatures/algalblooms.aspx.

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