Two miles deep into the woods of Isle Royale National Park, Mark Edlund smelled something foul. He was stunned when, a quarter-mile down the trail, he reached a small lake and saw that his nose was right.
In one of the most remote and protected places in the Upper Midwest, far out from the Lake Superior shore, an intense outbreak of toxic blue-green algae had taken control of the little island lake.
That lake and others on Isle Royale have turned thick with noxious algae blooms every other year or so since that 2007 visit, said Edlund, senior scientist of the Science Museum of Minnesota's St. Croix Watershed Research Station. So have lakes in Voyageurs National Park and in federally protected forests along the North Shore and near the headwaters of the Mississippi River.
The toxic blooms are sadly expected now in ponds and lakes of cities, suburbs and rural towns where heavy runoff from fertilized fields and lawns fuels the growth, turning lakes a sickly, oily green. The blue-green algae can kill pet dogs and can be poisonous to people when ingested. It has shut down beaches, fisheries and, in some cases, drinking water supplies.
Now scientists are racing to find out why the outbreaks are reaching some of Minnesota's most pristine, faraway lakes.
"What's happening in these wilderness lakes is giving us a real gut check," Edlund said. "We need to tease apart why this is happening, because our tool box for managing lakes is fairly limited."
A warming climate is certainly one of the culprits, Edlund said. With less ice cover and longer growing seasons, the conditions are better for growth of the bacteria that causes the blooms.
There is also mounting evidence that winds pick up pollution and nutrients from even the smallest fragments of dust and soil and drop them onto every part of the region, even the inland waters of Isle Royale.