
Milfoil Project

|
| Environmental Threats to our Lake
Eurasian Watermilfoil

Eurasian watermilfoil
(EWM) is an exotic aquatic nuisance plant which grows very rapidly and spreads quickly and easily. On some lakes it is so extensive that it chokes out the native plants and makes an impenetrable mat on the surface of the water. First found in Schroon Lake at the marina, EWM was so thick that benthic barriers, mats placed on the bottom of the marina channel to kill the plants by depriving them of sunlight and oxygen, were used in conjunction with hand harvesting in order to bring the milfoil in the marina channel under control. By the end of the summer of 2006 there were a total of 27 mapped sites of milfoil in the lake being hand harvested.
|
|
Hand Harvesting
 Hand harvesting is performed by divers with net bags who carefully remove the roots of the plants from the bottom of the lake. This method is deemed more effective and more ecologically sound than using a pesticide. Originally the SLA funded the hand harvesting of EWM but as more and more beds of milfoil were found throughout the lake, it was decided that the Towns of Schroon Lake, Horicon and Chester would fund that cost. They currently share the annual costs in proportion to their "presence" on the lake. In 2007, thanks to the efforts of our Lake Manager, Steve LaMere of Adirondack Ecologists and our Recording Secretary, Eric Cordis, the three towns also received a state grant of $28,000 to help with hand harvesting. Over the years that milfoil has been being hand harvested, the actual biomass of milfoil removed each year has been reduced due to constant mapping and harvesting.
|
|
Milfoil Harvesting

 |
 |  | |  Our Lake Manager, Steve LaMere preparing to hand harvest milfoil plants
| This is our Lake Manager, Steve LaMere, of Adirondack Ecologists, hand harvesting Eurasian Watermilfoil. There are Volunteer opportunities available to SLA members to assist him with this project by patrolling the areas where he and his divers are working to keep them safe from intrusion by other boats while they are at work.
Please Note!! Hand harvesting is work that should ONLY be done by a professional, or the infestation can actually be spread in the process. For more information visit our Info page for links to other sites.
|
|
|
 |