March 2023

Climate change is a journey that we are all on for the rest of our lives. So let’s get right to the point: How will climate change impact the Great Lakes?

climate road landscape people
Photo by Markus Spiske on Pexels.com

Warming temperatures, extreme weather and precipitation events and changes in growing seasons will impact the Great Lakes in many ways, notably:

  1. Increase in invasive species;
  2. Expansion of harmful algal blooms;
  3. Fluctuation of water levels; 
  4. Decline in coastal health.

Why do these matter? 

Some of these threats will be the subject of their own posts in the future. But a few connections for foundational understanding. 

As a fragile ecosystem, the Great Lakes have already been permanently damaged by invasive species. When non-native species are introduced by deliberate or accidental human activity, they often have no natural predators. Invasive species can decrease native fish or other species and degrade lake aesthetic value, threatening existing ecologies and economies. The zebra mussel infestation is one of the most prominent invasive species storylines of the Great Lakes. The mussels, which likely arrived in ballast waters or on ships from international seas, prolifically filter out algae that native species need for food, essentially sucking life out of the Great Lakes. They have created a dramatic upset in the ecosystem and, by reducing plant and animal life in the lakes, make them more prone to harmful algae. The mussels are also a physical nuisance, littering beaches, clogging pipes and even damaging boat motors.   

Harmful algal blooms upset the ecological balance of nutrients, plants and animals in and around the lakes. They can impact the respiratory health of animals and humans and they can threaten access to clean drinking water. The drinking water crisis in Toledo, Ohio in July 2014 raised awareness of this issue, but did not yield political or popular willpower to change human activity, notably in the agricultural sector, creating some of the challenge. 

Scientists see a future of significant water level variability due to climate change. High water levels and powerful waves and storms are causing coastal damage, including infrastructure damage along the shoreline and eroding beaches. A March 2020 analysis of rising Lake Michigan waters led the city of South Haven, Michigan to cite a cost of $16M to repair damage to infrastructure of the marina, stormwater pipes and utility lines and to make necessary improvements to their water filtration plant.

Low water levels due to greater evaporation as the climate warms put shipping, recreation and hydropower at risk and increases the possibility of harmful algal blooms, which thrive in shallower, warmer waters.   

Climate change also exacerbates existing water inequities.  Low-income communities and communities of color often bear the burden of environmental threats to the Great Lakes since they are often located in closer proximity to polluted waterways and access points and are more likely to have old and deteriorating infrastructure (e.g. lead water lines; older sewer pipes).

Our climate change journey will not have a happily ever after where everything turns out OK in the end. However, by better educating ourselves about impacts and potential mitigating activities, we can take personal and civic action to try and improve outcomes in our local communities, country and world.

I will continue to profile the impact of climate change on the Great Lakes region; it’s important that we honestly face and navigate the challenges. But I will also explore a connected, but distinct question: Will the Great Lakes region be a climate refuge? Stay tuned.

Sugarloaf Mountain west of Marquette, MI, Lake Superior
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In 2011, Good Morning America named Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore in Michigan the Most Beautiful Place in America. It beat out Aspen, CO, Cape Cod, MA and Lanikai Beach, HI among others, taking many people by surprise. But it shouldn’t have!

We spent an idyllic four days in the area in June 2019. I would highly recommend it for a trip. The National Lakeshore includes 64 miles of beaches along Lake Michigan, two islands (North and South Manitou), 26 inland lakes and over 50,000 acres of land. The region more widely includes large inland lakes, Midwest-size mountains (Crystal Mountain), and sits proximal to Traverse City and to the beautiful Leelenau Penninsula.   

Some highlights from our trip:

The Dunes themselves are astounding. Many of them are huge and steep expanses sloping down into the lake. From some viewpoints, including many along the Pierce Stocking Scenic Drive, all the eye sees is sand sharply meeting water. Many of them should not be climbed! The park posts numerous warnings of the danger of making it down – but not back up the shifting sands. Each year there are approximately 60 search and rescues and individuals will see fines of $2,000 or more for the rescue effort. For those interested though, The Dune Climb is a designated area for dune ascent and descent. Bring water!

We found numerous beach playgrounds in the area. These were basically a dream come true for our two girls, reinforcing that it’s really the simple things that bring joy. 

The region includes the sweet town of Glen Arbor with one of most adorable independent bookstores I’ve ever been to – The Cottage Bookshop. We also enjoyed a brewery in Frankfurt and hiking trails in Empire.  

Northern Michigan is famous for its cherries. We closed out our time at Sleeping Bear Dunes with dinner at The Cherry Hut, a restaurant that opened in Beulah in 1922. The trip was everything a vacation should be with opportunities for activity and rest while surrounded by water, sand, grass, trees and sky. 

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My husband and I moved to Cleveland in 2014. That fall we had a BBQ with some new Cleveland friends, one of whom was stationed here with the U.S. Coast Guard.

Partway through the evening, someone posed a question: What if the Great Lakes were the characters of the classic 1986 John Hughes movie The Breakfast Club about five teenagers serving detention one Saturday?  Which lake would be which character?

Without any hesitation, the group dove into serious analysis. Here is where we landed, with some context on the five characters given the movie is almost 38 years old.

Lake Michigan: Claire Standish as played by Molly Ringwald

Princess crown drawing, fashion vintage

The rich, popular lake. Molly Ringwald’s character was perceptibly “the princess”, but one who struggled with peer pressure to be perfect. It seems possible to say that Lake Michigan might feel that same way. According to the Michigan Department of Natural Resources in 2017, the most visited parks in the Great Lakes region are on Lake Michigan. Chicago, sitting on the southwestern shores of Lake Michigan, is arguably the most well-known, and is the most densely populated Great Lakes city. And while the state of Michigan’s slick, well-known tourism marketing campaign “Pure Michigan” aims to promote the entire state, people invariably associate it with Lake Michigan and some of its shinier resort towns on its eastern coastline (think South Haven, Charlevoix).

Lake Superior: Andrew Clark as played by Emilio Estevez 

Ice hockey players on the rink

The jock of the lakes – the coldest, deepest and largest. The most populous city on Lake Superior is Thunder Bay, Ontario, a place known for producing college and professional hockey players. Lake Superior is a solid lake – but it’s also volatile, like Emilio Estevez’s character. Late fall is storm season and the lake can become rough, turbulent and angry. The largest waves ever recorded on the lake were 28.8 feet (8.8. meters) high (recorded October of 2017) and one of the most famous shipwrecks in Great Lakes history happened when the Edmund Fitzgerald sank on Lake Superior in 1975.

Lake Ontario: Brian Johnson as played by Michael Anthony Hall

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The smallest and most cerebral of the lakes. Ontario has a neat, tight shoreline and is not known for beautiful beaches like some of the other lakes. But it has a hip side with the gem city of Toronto on its northern shores. Like Michael Anthony Hall’s character in the movies, it’s small, but has ambitions for something larger: the waters of Lake Ontario flow into the St. Lawrence River, pass by Montreal and Quebec City and out into the Atlantic Ocean. 

Lake Huron: John Bender as played by Judd Nelson

Black Hawk Horse Weathervane Pattern

The dark horse of the lakes. Potentially the least discussed, it is the second largest of the Great Lakes with tremendous variety in terrain including over 30,000 islands, many of them in the Georgian Bay. There are over 1,000 shipwrecks sitting on the bottom of Lake Huron due to the varied geography and potential for storms. There is also a petrified forest of trees over 7,000 years old in the vicinity of Lexington, Michigan. In sum: A lake of great variety and unknown inner depths just like the rough, but somewhat misunderstood, character of the movie.      

Lake Erie: Allison Reynolds as played by Ally Sheedy

Black sheep with tongue out

The basket case of the lakes. The black sheep. The shallowest of the Great Lakes by far, Lake Erie has been prone to challenges, most notoriously ones created by pollutants of different kinds (algal blooms, fires near the mouth of the Cuyahoga River in Cleveland due to industrial pollutants). But, like Ally Sheedy’s character in the movie, cut back those bangs and wash out that dandruff and she can clean up well. Lake Erie’s health absolutely remains threatened, but there are also remarkable stories of renewal and it is currently the strongest fishing arena in the Great Lakes – something many people don’t realize.

The Breakfast Club closes with a voiceover reading of a letter the group wrote while in detention. In the letter they ask the school principal to see more expansively their traits and talents both individually and as a group. I like to think the five Great Lakes would make the same ask of all of us.

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