{"id":1531,"date":"2018-07-31T16:49:00","date_gmt":"2018-07-31T23:49:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/possible-algae-increase-dying-gastineau-channel-waters-red\/"},"modified":"2018-08-13T13:02:47","modified_gmt":"2018-08-13T20:02:47","slug":"possible-algae-increase-dying-gastineau-channel-waters-red","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/home\/possible-algae-increase-dying-gastineau-channel-waters-red\/","title":{"rendered":"Possible algae increase dyeing Gastineau Channel waters red"},"content":{"rendered":"
Eric Prestegard saw it for the first time Sunday.<\/p>\n
A shade of rust-colored red crept its way through the waters of Gastineau Channel as Prestegard, the executive director of Douglas Island Pink and Chum (DIPAC) Inc. watched and worried. This is a vital time of year for the hatchery, which is midway through its egg taking process, Prestegard said.<\/p>\n
Two days prior to that, the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation had gotten a call that something unusual was floating around in the channel. Dave Pikul, an environmental program specialist for the Southeast Region’s Spill Response Unit, went down to the water and took a look.<\/p>\n
“It was pretty widespread,” Pikul said. “Our observations down at the shoreline identified it was not oil, but it was some kind of biological mass.”<\/p>\n
Exactly what that biological mass is, however, is still yet to be determined. Kate Kanouse, a habitat biologist for the Department of Fish & Game, said the overriding current theory is that it’s an algae bloom, or algal bloom. An algae bloom is a rapid increase in the amount of algae in the water, usually brought on as a result of rising water temperatures.<\/p>\n
“That’s the most likely cause,” Kanouse said. “We’ve had a nice warm summer and it fits the criteria of what we would see of an algal bloom. I wouldn’t expect it to be anything else, and I don’t expect it to be dangerous.”<\/p>\n