January 30, 2008 Conservation Lobby
Day. Madison, Wisconsin. More information on this year's
priority
issues. Sign up
for this free
event.
Aquatic Invasive Species
Workshop Sat., February 16,
2008 8:00 am -
5:00 pm Early-bird registration January 31, 2008 Register
online or call 262-514-3238. Download event
brochure
February 22,
2008. Wisconsin Lakes Stewardship Award nominations
due. Nominate
online!
March 15,
2008. Lake Leaders Institute nominations due. Nominate
online!
April 17-19,
2008 Wisconsin Lakes Convention. KI Convention
Center, Green Bay, WI. Convention
details coming
soon! |
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Let your
legislator know you’re coming! |
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Join hundreds of
citizens from every part of Wisconsin for Conservation Lobby
Day on Wednesday, January 30, 2008. Sign up
online on the Wisconsin League of Conservation
Voters website by Tuesday, January
22nd, 2008!
This free event is
a great opportunity to tell your legislators why you care
about Wisconsin lakes and how action on Wisconsin's
Conservation Priorities can help ensure a clean, safe, healthy
future for our lakes and people who enjoy them.
This year's
Wisconsin Conservation Priorities feature three issues that
are important to the future of Wisconsin's lakes:
Carpool coordination and promotional materials
for Lobby Day are available on the Wisconsin
League of Conservation Voters
website
We encourage you to extend an invitation to
others interested in lakes and these issues to join us at
Lobby Day. If you are unable to attend, please consider
sending a letter to your legislator to highlight how these
issues are important to your lake (sample
letter available online) and/or encourage your
lake group to pass
resolutions in support of these priority
issues. |
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Knocking at
the Gates: an AIS workshop |
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Learn more about the newest
invasive species to be on the alert for, what has been
done—and what still needs to be done— to control these
unwanted visitors by attending the Aquatic Invasive Species
workshop set for February 16, 2008, at the Hyatt Regency Hotel
in downtown Milwaukee. Download
event brochure.
The all-day Saturday event will
explore aquatic invasive species prevention and management
tools available to fully address the concerns posed by new
invasive species with the potential to gain a foothold in
Wisconsin’s waters.
Featured speakers
Robert Dahl, Wis. Dept. of
Agriculture, Trade, and Consumer Protection (DATCP), will talk
about DATCP’s role in AIS control, and Wisconsin’s recent
experience with hydrilla. The first documented occurrence
of Hydrilla was discovered in summer 2007 in a private,
artificial pond in Northeast Wisconsin. Robert will
describe how this occurrence came to be, its likely source,
and how two state agencies and the local government cooperated
with the landowner to contain and control this new aquatic
invader (the hydrilla population is currently contained at
this site).
Michael Staggs, WI DNR Bureau of
Fisheries Management, will talk about Wisconsin’s integrated
approach to control the invasive pathogen Viral Hemorrhagic
Septicemia (VHS). VHS, a serious fish disease, was found
in Spring 2007 in the Lake Winnebago system and Lake
Michigan. Mike will describe key aspects of Wisconsin’s
VHS control program: regulations, surveillance and monitoring,
biosecurity measures, bait fish quality control, research,
plus public education and outreach to prevent the spread of
this virus.
Peter Flaherty, Attorney at
WI DNR Bureau of Legal Services, will discuss Wisconsin's
invasive species laws and administrative rule
development. Peter will summarize Wisconsin's current
laws to control invasive species, plus review the new invasive
species identification and control administrative rules being
developed by the DNR.
Registration
information
Download the workshop brochure, which
includes the program agenda, registration form, and other
event information.
Cost to attend the Saturday
workshop is $35\person before January 31, 2008; $40\person
thereafter. The fee covers all meals and workshop
materials. Register online at the Wind Lake Management
District website: www.wlmd.org
or call 262-514-3238.
Join us for a Friday Night Fish Fry at the Rock
Bottom Brewery!
Plan to join the conference hosts at a traditional
Wisconsin fish fry on the Friday evening preceding the
conference. Cost is $15\person. |
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Public listening sessions scheduled for
proposed invasive species classification
rules |
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The
Department of Natural Resources (DNR) and the Wisconsin
Council on Invasive Species (Council) have released the
proposed administrative rules to classify and regulate
invasive species (NR 40). Six public informational meetings
(see WAL’s online calendar) will be held across the state in
January so folks can learn more about the classification
system as well as provide feedback about the proposal before
formal public hearings on the rule are scheduled.
View
the draft
rule and provide
comments online.
Background information
The rules—which have been under development for the last
two years—classify invasive species into four categories:
prohibited, restricted, watch list, and non-restricted. These
rules include species of invasive plants, animals, and
pathogens that live in land or water environments.
Species classified as Prohibited are not
currently present in Wisconsin—or are present only as isolated
or pioneer populations—but have the potential to become
established and cause significant harm to
our natural resources or economy. Prohibited species that may be familiar to lake
enthusiasts include hydrilla, Asian and common carp, quagga
mussels, and spiny water fleas among many others. The rules
prohibit the transportation, possession, transference, or
introduction of a Prohibited species. The rules also outline
control measures that can be taken to eradicate Prohibited
species, should they be discovered.
Restricted species
Species classified as Restricted are already
established in the state, or have high potential to become
established, and cause significant harm to our natural
resources or economy. Examples of familiar aquatic invasive
species classified as Restricted include Eurasian
watermilfoil, curly-leaf pondweed, rusty crayfish, and zebra
mussels. Like species classified as Prohibited, Restricted
species cannot be transported, possessed, transferred, or
introduced.
Watch List and Non-restricted species
Species classified as on the Watch List are
not currently found in the state or the extent of their
limited presence or impact in Wisconsin’s environment is not
sufficiently documented. Non-restricted invasive species may
have beneficial uses and most are already integrated into
Wisconsin’s environment to the extent that state wide control
or eradication is not practical or feasible. Species
classified as Watch List or Non-restricted are not regulated
under NR 40. However, if additional information becomes
available, Watch List species can be moved into another
category.
Preventative measures included in the
rule
The rules also require certain preventative
measures and limit some common activities that may become
pathways for the inadvertent introduction or spread of
invasive species, many of which are of interest to water
lovers. The rules would require immediate drainage of boats
and equipment (including bilge water, ballast tanks, bait
buckets, and live wells) after the watercraft, boat trailer,
or other gear is removed from inland or outlying waters. Boats
and equipment traveling into Wisconsin from other states would
be subject to the same drainage requirements.
The rules would also prohibit the launching
and transport of any watercraft, trailer, or other equipment
if there are aquatic plants or aquatic animal attached.
The rules also establish criteria for
classification of new invasive species.
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| Monitors make the difference with
invasives |
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When Eurasian-Water Milfoil (EWM)
was discovered in the Pike Lake Chain four years ago, it
prompted property owners and state/local government to develop
a strategy to monitor and prevent further AIS from entering
the lakes. Extensive volunteer monitoring/inspection programs
at the boat landings and education—funded by the DNR, Bayfield
County, the Iron River Lakes Association and the Delta Area
Lakes Association over the last several years—have helped
shine a spotlight on AIS and increase awareness.
Last year the DNR provided a $5,000
grant and Bayfield County provided $7,200 in matching grant
funds to hire a Clean Boat, Clean Water Program (CBCW)
coordinator for monitoring the Bayfield County boat landings
at Delta Lake and the Pike Chain. The CBCW program is
facilitated by the DNR and UW-Extension Lakes
Program.
Monitoring Coordinator Karen Austin
places her crew at the boat landings starting the first
weekend in May for the fishing opener, and has them back on
board for Memorial Day weekend. They work throughout the rest
of the summer/fall season for a total of 17 weeks with a 5-8
p.m. shift on Friday evenings and 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. shifts on
Saturdays and Sundays. Extra shifts were added to the schedule
to cover fishing tournaments, holidays, and festival weekends
when the landings are extremely busy.
Over the 17-week period, the crews
inspected about 100 watercraft per weekend. Of those, 37 boats
were possibly infected and were treated. The water was drained
from the boat motors and live bait wells and the boats and
trailers were washed and hosed down and in some cases a
vinegar and salt solution was applied for spiny water flea or
VHS. Boats leaving the Pike Lake Chain are also inspected
because EWM exists in three of the five
lakes.
Over the course of the summer,
nearly 1,700 boat owners were surveyed with a standard CBCW
survey that supplies vital data to the state about AIS and
identifies and quantifies the type of AIS and its location in
the state. Inspection and education is of the utmost
importance at the boat landings. Controlling AIS has taken
both the private and public sector to be
effective.
Read
full story. |
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Monitoring to show
climate impact on Minnesota
lakes |
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Two dozen lakes across Minnesota
will become the bench markers for scientists to study how the
state’s waterways are handling an onslaught of problems
including global warming, lakeside development, exotic species
and polluted runoff. These lakes represent a cross section of
Minnesota’s 13,000 lakes and are scattered across the
state.
This four year pilot project is
scheduled to begin in 2008. Scientists will observe a variety
of indicators including water temperature, oxygen, phosphorus,
zooplankton, invertebrates, fish growth and population rates,
and others.
Steve Heiskary, a research
scientist leading the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency’s
part of the project, said tying combinations of issues
together will be critical — such as figuring out a way to
measure how higher temperatures couple with increased
phosphorus to cause algae blooms.
“We need to see how the changing
climate is affecting all the indicators and then determine how
we can best adapt our management,” Ray Valley, project leader
for the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources
said.
The state hopes to partner with
counties, townships, lake associations and other groups not
just to monitor lakes but to enact change that will protect
them. The plan is to keep studying these sentinel lakes
intensively into the distant future. Eventually, being able to
measure the impact and degree of change for specific lakes
should help land and water managers figure out how to better
protect the water.
Countering Climate Change is one of three
Conservation Lobby Day Priorities. Read more about how
climate
change may affect Wisconsin Lakes and
sign
up for Lobby Day. If you are unable to attend,
consider approaching your lake group about passing
a resolution in support of a strong Compact and
sending
your legislator a personal
letter. |
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| Is Wisconsin poised to ratify the Great Lakes
Compact? |
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Wisconsin remains only state to fail to introduce
legislation
Governors of eight Great Lakes States have signed the
Great Lakes Water Resources Compact to manage and protect this
most valuable resource. The Compact must be ratified by the
legislatures of each state and by Congress. Two states —
Illinois and Minnesota — have adopted the compact, and five
other states — Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and New
York — have legislation pending. Wisconsin is the only
remaining state that has not fulfilled its duty to its
citizens to ratify the Compact.
A bipartisan group of four state
legislators—Sen. Rob Cowles, Rep. John Richards, Sen. John
Lehman, and Rep. Cory Mason— plan to introduce a bill in late
January that would only adopt the Compact, and include a water
conservation management plan. The group took on drafting the
bill after a special legislative committee on the Great Lakes
compact failed to develop legislation and disbanded in
September. Fifty legislators have made a pledge to protect the
Great Lakes from sending water to other states and countries
by supporting the Great Lakes Compact.
Since the Great Lakes hold 90% of
the nation's freshwater supply, the pressure may increase on
Congress to approve taking water from this region. Already,
the Great Lakes supplies drinking water to 30 million people
in Wisconsin, Chicago, Toronto, Buffalo and elsewhere. If
Congress does not ratify the compact by the 2010 census,
redistricting may result in Great Lakes states losing 10 to 15
congressional seats to states in the South and West with water
shortages.
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Who are the people in your
neighborhood? |
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Who are the people, groups, leaders, and
businesses that have made a positive impact to your lake this
summer?
The Wisconsin Lakes Partnership gives out
these awards each year in celebration of the extraordinary
volunteer and professional efforts given to protect and
improve lakes in Wisconsin. The Stewardship Awards represent
our best collective effort to honor and celebrate all the
incredible work that goes into ensuring the future of our
state's Legacy of Lakes. Please join us in that spirit by
nominating a deserving person or group today.
This year's nominees and winners will be
celebrated at the 2008 Wisconsin Lakes Convention, to be held
in Green Bay on April 17-19, 2008. Stewardship Awards
nomination guidelines and online nomination form are online at
the UW-
Extension Lakes Program website. For more
information on the awards or for nomination materials in
another format, please contact the Wisconsin Association of
Lakes office at 800-542-5253 (toll free in Wisconsin) or at
608-661-4313, or email us at wal@wisconsinlakes.org.
Nominations are due no later than
February 22,
2008. |
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Working with you for clean, safe,
healthy lakes |
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The Wisconsin Association of Lakes is the
only statewide organization working exclusively to protect and
enhance the quality of Wisconsin's 15,000 lakes.
We represent citizens like you who care
about Wisconsin's lakes as a natural resource, and who also
recognize the value healthy lakes bring to property values,
tourist economies, and overall quality of life.
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