(BlackburnNews.com file photo)(BlackburnNews.com file photo)
Midwestern

Commission releases study on fish population, size in Great Lakes

A commission has released a report identifying why there are reduced fish populations in four of the five Great Lakes, including Huron.

Allison Voglesong Zejnati, a communication specialist with the International Joint Commission, said the issue is called a near-shore shunt.

"The combination of invasive species and algae blooms in the near-shore are trapping nutrients too close to the shore. Not enough nutrients are feeding the food web out in the deep part of the lake," said Zejnati. "The International Joint Commission Science Advisory Board recommends that the scientists and managers who are working both on fisheries and on water quality, addressing nutrients, they need to do better to work at an ecosystem-based scale."

She added the issue isn't just affecting fish populations but size as well.

That's creating serious problems for both sports and commercial fishing in Lakes Huron, Superior, Michigan and Ontario.

Read More Local Stories

Photo by Sarah Joy via Flickr

Owen Sound Library session gets cyclists ready to roll

Dust off those handlebars and pump up those tires because cycling season is officially upon us! If your trusty two-wheeler is looking a bit more "rusty" than "ready," the Owen Sound & North Grey Union Public Library has just the thing to get you back on the road safely.