Great Lakes Water Levels

colbysmith

Active member
Levels are up. I noticed in August while boating around Door County in Lake Michigan on the Bay side, water levels were up nicely. Hopefully the levels will stay up this summer!

http://host.madison.com/wsj/news/local/ ... e6ce5.html

Here is the article:
Are the Great Lakes’ water levels normal?

For the first time in about 25 years, the water level of the all the Great Lakes is above normal. Lakes Superior, Michigan and Huron are about 5 inches above the long term average.

This ends a 15-year period where lake levels have been below historic averages.

Lakes Huron and Michigan were at record low levels in January 2013; that is a rapid rise in water level to be above normal two years later. Such a rapid increase has not been measured since observations began in the mid-1800s.

The water levels of the Great Lakes are determined by the amount of water flowing in and out of the lakes.

Precipitation, runoff, and water from streams and groundwater supply water to the lakes, while evaporation and water flowing out of the Great Lakes system are water losses.

When the input exceeds the output, the levels rise.

The water cycle of the lakes is complex, and weather has played a role in this turnaround in lake levels.

Above-average precipitation and above average runoff in the Great Lakes watershed, particularly in the springs of 2013 and 2014, helped to restore lake levels.

The frigid winter of 2013-2014 also helped by reducing evaporation.

Ice on the lake and cold waters reduce evaporation, which also reduces snowfall in the snow-belt regions of the lakes.

Information on and forecasts of Great Lakes water levels is available from several agencies in the United States and Canada.

The forecast for the water levels is to continue to be above average, though levels could change relatively quickly.

Steve Ackerman and Jonathan Martin, professors in the UW-Madison department of atmospheric and oceanic sciences, are guests on WHA radio (970 AM) at 11:45 a.m. the last Monday of each month.
 
Having experianced the super low water in the past several years the one advantage was that beaches had plenty of sand and the shallow draft of our boats make possible to what other boaters demmed a big fat NOPE. I will be interested to see how high water influances fish population and traditional spawning habbitat.
(Big trouble in the Apostle Islands FYI) The commercial fishing intrest is having a serious impact on the fisheries here. This cold clean water can only hold so many fish and the miles and miles of nets are taking their toll. Its serious and I don't know if I will see a rebound in my lifetime. To make matters more complex the fisheries have treaty right issues and Judges not qualified biologist making policy.

Big trouble on big water indeed.
 
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