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Nandita was invited to speak at the Ohio State University SENR Seminar Series. Her talk was entitled, "Back to the Future: How Past Land Use Impact Current Water Quality".

On October 24th, 2018, Zobia Jawed gave a guest talk to an Ecology Class at MacMaster University. The talk was titled "Nutrient Changes in the Great Lakes: Addressing Algae Blooms and Biodiversity in an Era of Climate Change". It focused on water as an interdisciplinary issue, looking specifically at waste water treatment plants.

John Dony, a current master's student working on the Lake Futures project, has been awarded the UW Provost Graduate Scholarship. The scholarship started in Fall 2018 and will continue for three semesters.

Congratulations John!

On Friday, six members of our team met with researchers at Environment Canada to discuss the Lake Futures project. The two groups exchanged information to see where our projects and programs intersect with respect to current plans, and what types of environmental data will be required moving forward.

The attendees of the meeting were: Philippe Van Cappellen, Serghei Bocaniov, Kiana Zolfaghari, Homa Kheyrollah Pour, Igor Markelov, and Tatjana Milojevic from Lake Futures, and Sean Backus, Alice Dove, Caren Binding, Luis Leon, and David Depew from Environment Canada.

The Global Water Futures (GWF) Inception Meeting took place this week, on January 22nd and 23rd, at Wilfrid Laurier University. The meeting featured presentations from Principal Investigators and researchers from the GWF team, including Lake Futures PI, Dr. Nandita Basu.

For more information, please visit the Global Water Futures website, and the Lake Futures Inception Meeting presentation, posted under our new Resources tab.

Professor Mark Servos, Canada Research Chair in Water Quality Protection and professor of Biology, Nandita Basu, professor in the Departments of Earth and Environmental Sciences and Civil and Environmental Engineering, and post-doctoral fellow, Kim Van Meter, were prominently featured in Kitchener-Waterloo’s local newspaper.

For many Canadians, summer time means time at the lake, swimming, fishing, boating, and relaxing. Nothing can spoil this experience like blue-green mats of muck, caused by algal blooms. These blooms negatively affect not only recreational activities – but also put drinking water source, property values, wildlife, and human health at risk. In the 1970s, scientists discovered that the nutrient phosphorus caused algal blooms, which led to new regulations and improved sewage treatment. Nevertheless, blooms continue to plague many Canadian lakes.