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Report: Angora Fire didn’t hurt Tahoe


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UC Davis researchers noted several bright spots in their annual Lake Tahoe health report issued today: The 2007 Angora Fire had no significant impact on lake clarity; a small test of a method to kill invasive clams worked; the pollutant phosphorus was at its lowest level in 29 years; and free-floating algae in the lake have generally remained constant since 1996.

Earlier this month, the UC Davis Tahoe Environmental Research Center announced lake clarity held relatively steady in 2009. It was noted the rate of decline in Lake Tahoe’s clarity since 2000 was less that that seen in past decades.

“Overall, we remain cautiously optimistic,” John Reuter, associate director of the UC Davis Tahoe Environmental Research Center, said in a press release.

The “Tahoe: State of the Lake Report” is intended to give the public a better understanding of the changes occurring in Lake Tahoe on a year-to-year basis and to place current conditions within a historical perspective. It summarizes tens of thousands of scientific observations of lake weather, water conditions and aquatic life made since 1900.

“This report is an impartial, annual accounting of many key variables of lake change,” Geoff Schladow, director of the UC Davis Tahoe Environmental Research Center, said in a statement. “It helps us all recognize the differences between natural variability and longterm change, and how our efforts toward the restoration of Lake Tahoe are progressing.”

Reuter emphasized the lake is not out of the woods, “but it does have the ability to improve, provided that pollution control is achieved.”

The report also shows these 2009 events: Potentially disastrous invasive quagga mussels were found on 10 boats inspected by Tahoe management agencies as they headed for the lake. More precipitation fell as rain and less as snow. Algae attached to rocks and docks increased along the northeast shoreline. The amount of water-clouding particles and nutrients reaching the lake by west-side streams increased as precipitation rose from previous years. Lake levels fell below the natural rim of the lake, causing water to stop flowing into the Truckee River.

The full 69-page report is online.

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Comments (4)
  1. Bob says - Posted: September 1, 2010

    I can’t believe my tax dollars are going to pay for this.

  2. JoAnn says - Posted: September 1, 2010

    Glad it didn’t seem to hurt the Lake. Mis-leading, though, as many of us lost work, therefore our homes, and many lost treasured possessions.

  3. doubleblack says - Posted: September 1, 2010

    Looks like the disciples at UCD have have turned on the League to Destroy Freedom and the Sierra Clubbies. My sources have confirmed over two million tons of dirt and debris entered the lake after the man made Angora fire. They will show up in about 5 to 10 years with a loss of 20-30 feet of clarity unless the taxpayers spends an estimated 10 billion dollars on a gigantic reverse osmosis facility. It has been scientifically determine there is a latency period for the noxious microorganisms reproductive functions of 2-4 years.
    At least we can be thankful for the USFS’s marvelous reforestation and beautification of the burned out area.
    Thank you Terry.
    I am call for a Congressional investigation of the conspiracy to hide the immenient destruction of our God Tahoe.
    There is no time to loose before all hope is lost.

  4. h says - Posted: September 1, 2010

    JUST THINK BOB, THERE WAS A TRUCK LEAVING THE SCENE WITH U.S.F.S LOGO ON THE DOORS WHEN THE FIRE GOT STARTED.