Cyanobacteria keeps 2 Moncton lakes closed - Action News
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New Brunswick

Cyanobacteria keeps 2 Moncton lakes closed

With water levels still low during a warm summer, people in Moncton are still being warned not to let their dogs swim or drink the water at Jones Lake or Irishtown Nature Park.

Weekly water monitoring continues during warm summer

Heather Fraser, Moncton's natural resource program co-ordinator, says results from weekly monitoring determine if the lakes will remain closed because of cyanobacteria or E. coli. (Pierre Fournier/CBC)

With water levels still low during a warm summer, people in Moncton are being warned not to let their dogs swim or drink the water at Jones Lake or Irishtown Nature Park.

Heather Fraser, the city'snatural resource program co-ordinator, said officials have been monitoring cyanobacteriain the waterweekly since early July when water temperatures rose.

"Algae is starting to form in the water column, and we're starting to see counts a little higher than what we'd like to see," Fraser said.

Irishtown Nature Park was closed in late July and Jones Lake was closed two weeks ago.Centennial Park is not affected because it's already closed for maintenance.

The closures at Irishtown Nature Park and Jones Lake came after cyanobacteria, also known asblue-green algae, were found in the water and testing showed they were toxic.

"Once that happens, we close the water to recreation for kayaks and canoes and also for people who let their dogs swim and drink the water," Fraser said. "So we just do that definitely as a precaution."

Jones Lake in Moncton was closed because of a high E. coli count in the water. (Pierre Fournier/CBC)

She saidJones Lake didn't havecyanobacteria but did have high E. coli counts.

"We closed that to recreation to stabilize, hopefully, through some rain or wind action."

Because Jones Lake is so shallow, Fraser said, the city will have to keep a close watch on what is happening.

Over the previous few summers, the city has seen the green colour of algae before seeing a high bacteria count in tests, but this summer the opposite happened.

"That's why it was more important to close it because people don't see the green, and they think it's still OK to let the their dogs in [the water]."

Fraser said she'll get theresults of the latest weekly testsFriday and decide whether Irishtown Nature Park and Jones Lake can reopen.

If the count is low for cyanobacteria but high for E. coli, Jones Lake will remain closed.

"That will be a weekly monitoring program until the waters start to cool," Fraser said.

As for theTurtle Creek and Tower Road reservoirs, the source of drinking water, there have been no issues this summer, she said.

With files from Kate Letterick