&EPA

United States
Environmental Protection
Agency

December, 2016



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EPA's National Lakes Assessment 2012 Report Released

National Lakes

On December 8, 2016, EPA announced the release of tha^RTgw»feiMti^«

. This report is the culmination of a significant
partnership between EPA, states, tribes, and other partners. In addition to the
report, assessment of conditions at regional scales, differences between
natural lakes and reservoirs, and an opportunity to explore population-level
results in an interactive dashboard are also available. A few key findings from
the report include the following:

•	The NLA indicates that nutrient pollution is common in U.S. lakes; 40% of
lakes have excessive levels of total phosphorus and 35% have excessive
levels of total nitrogen. Nutrient pollution is the most widespread stressor
among those measured in the NLA and can contribute to algae blooms and
affect public health and recreational opportunities in lakes.

•	In comparison with the 2007 report, a measure of the density of cells that
could produce cyanotoxins, shows a statistically significant increase
(+8.3%) in the percentage of lakes in the most disturbed category. The
NLA identified a significant increase in the detection of microcystin among
lakes in 2012 (+9.5%). However, concentrations of this algal toxin
remained low and rarely exceeded WHO recreational levels of concern
(<1% of the population) in both assessments.

EPA and its partners are preparing to sample another 1,000 lakes in 2017, for
the third NLA. If you have any questions, please contact Amina Pollard, lead
for the NLA at pollard.amina@epa.aov

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Microcystis aeruginosa
Fluorescent microscope image
with green light excitation.
Magnification 600x.
Source: Dr. Robert Zucker, EPA

UPCOMING EVENTS

Webinars

EPA's Water Research
Webinars

NWOMC and Sensor
Workgroup
January 17, 2017

Inland HABs Discussion
February 14, 2017

Conferences

ASLO

February 26 to March 3, 2017
Hawaii

IAGLR

May 15-19, 2017
Detroit, Michigan

Gordon Research Conference

Biotoxins

June 18-23, 2017

Easton, MA

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On December 9th, EPA released a pre-publication version of the
final fourth Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule
fUCMR 41 pursuant to the Safe Drinking Water Act. The final
rule identifies 30 contaminants that will be monitored by public
water systems between 2018 and 2020, and specifies the
analytical methods that must be used to measure these
contaminants. Of the 30 contaminants, ten are cyanotoxins:
microcystins (-LA, -LF, -LR, -LY, -RR, -YR, and total MCs),
nodularin, anatoxin-a, and cylindrospermopsin. EPA will consider
the occurrence data from UCMR 4 and other sources, along with
peer-reviewed health effects assessments, to support a
regulatory determination on whether to initiate the process to
develop a national primary drinking water regulation. EPA
published the final rule in the Federal Register here.

On December 12th, EPA published the

Draft Human Health Recreational
Ambient Water Quality Criteria
and/or Swimming Advisories for
Microcvstins and
Cylindrospermopsin to protect the
public from incidental ingestion of
cyanotoxins during primary contact
recreation. EPA is accepting comments
on the draft criteria document for 60
days. For more information, please
visit the Microbial

(Pathogens/Recreational Water Quality
Criteria page.

This newsletter was created by Dr. Lesley V. D'Anglada, Office of Water, Office of Science and Technology, United

States Environmental Protection Agency. To sign up for the newsletter please send an email to

danalada.leslev@epa.gov. For more information, visit EPA's CyanoHABs website at www.epa.gov/cvanohabs


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HABs, BEACH CLOSURES and HEALTH ADVISORIES, DECEMBER 2016

California /'\ Massachusetts /^\ Idaho /j\ Kansas /^\ Oregon /^\ Washington

SUMMARY OF HABs-RELATED ADVISORIES POSTED IN 2016*

* Postings include blooms, cautions, warnings, public health advisories, and public health warnings, due to the presence
of algae, toxins or both. This is NOT a comprehensive list, and many blooms may have not been reported. Thanks to
Johnwilliam Carroll (Pathways Internship Program) USEPA, for helping compiling this list.

Recently Published Articles

Reversal of a cvanobacterial bloom in response to early warnings

Michael L. Pace, Ryan D. Batt, Cal D. Buelo, Stephen R. Carpenter, Jonathan J. Cole, Jason T. Kurtzweil, and Grace M.
Wilkinson. PNAS, December 27, 2016.

Hiah-resoiution mapping of global surface water and its long-term changes

Jean-Frangois Pekel, Andrew Cottam, Noel Gorelick and Alan S. Belward. Letters. Nature. December 2016.

Spatiallv-expiicit forecasting of cvanobacteria assemblages in freshwater lakes bv muiti-obiective hybrid evolutionary
algorithms

Hongqing Cao, Friedrich Recknagel, Michael Bartkow. Ecological Modelling, Vol. 342, 24 December 2016, Pages 97-112.

Growth, phvsiochemical and antioxidant responses of overwintering benthic cvanobacteria to hydrogen peroxide
Chao Chen, Zhen Yang, Fanxiang Kong, Min Zhang, Yang Yu, Xiaoli Shi. Environmental Pollution, Vol. 219, December
2016, Pages 649-655.

A review of monitoring technologies for real-time management of cvanobacteria: Recent advances and future direction
Arash Zamyadi, Florence Choo, Gayle Newcombe, Richard Stuetz, Rita K. Henderson. TrAC Trends in Analytical Chemistry,
Vol. 85, Part A, December 2016, Pages 83-96.

Population persistence in flowing-water habitats: Conditions where flow-based management of harmful algal blooms
works, and where it does not

James P. Grover, Daniel L. Roelke, Bryan W. Brooks. Ecological Engineering, Vol. 99, February 2017. 172-181.

Useful Resources

V	EPA Cvanotoxins in Drinking Water Page

V	EPA Funding Opportunities Page

V	EPA Water Research Page

V	Great Lakes HABs Collaboratorv Events

Toxins Journal Special Collection on HABs

Topical Collection "Freshwater HABs and Health in a Changing
World". To submit a manuscript, please go to www.mdpi.com and
register to log in the journal.


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