Jeff Kart Executive Editor • Environment and Sustainability • Social Media Manager • Writer • Managing Editor • Communications • Marketing • Outreach • Strategic Planning • Training and Development 2w Report this post There’s an imbalance of phosphorus that fuels harmful algal blooms in Missisquoi Bay in the Lake Champlain basin.“Our watershed has more phosphorus going in than coming out,” explained Matthew Vaughan, Ph.D., chief scientist for the Lake Champlain Basin Program. “It’s been that way for a long time, over 100 years.”But a binational project set to conclude this fall will bring tools meant to help stem the flow of excess nutrients like phosphorus that fuel these cyanobacterial blooms in the bay.- From the IJC - International Joint Commission Shared Waters Newsletter, September 2024https://lnkd.in/ebGuGzDq 4 Like Comment To view or add a comment, sign in More Relevant Posts Raúl Osorio Ph.D. I Ecological Engineering I Coastal Resilience I GIS-Remote Sensing 4w Report this pos...