They're back: Algae blooms forming again on Whistle Bend pond - Action News
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They're back: Algae blooms forming again on Whistle Bend pond

The algae blooms have made the artificial pond look and smell like a sewage lagoon, similar to what happened in the summer of 2016, when algae blanketed much of the pond.

City of Whitehorse says it's looking into the situation

Algae blooms have formed along the shore of this artificial pond in Whitehorse's Whistle Bend subdivision. (David Croft/CBC)

Some residents of Whitehorse's Whistle Bend subdivision are renewing concerns about the artificial pond in their neighbourhood, as algae blooms have started forming there again even after the territorial governmentspent almost $1 million to fix the problem several years ago.

Algae has appeared along the shore of the pond, making it look similar to what it was in 2016, when algae blanketed much of the water.

While the algae has not made the pond stink at this time, some residents worry it may start to give off a bad odour later in the season.

"The water's stagnant. It's just the algae keeps growing and there's tons of mosquitoes all around here, and we don't even want to use the park there," resident Kathleen Booth said Friday.

"It's a new pond. There's problems with these subdivision ponds all across Canada. I think they need to do some research, figure it out, the right way, or just cover it up, because there's tons of mosquitoes and the algae's just so thick that it's going to smell pretty bad this late summer."

Algae blooms microscopic plants flourish in freshwater that's rich in phosphorus and nitrogen. Fertilizers, soaps and sewage effluent are all sources of such nutrients.

The algae in the Whistle Bend pond has become a big topic of discussion on the neighbourhood's Facebook page.

Song Lin, who posted on the page, says it appears the fountain and aeration systems that are supposed to keep water moving in the pond have not been working this summer.

Residents say the algae blooms have made the pond look and smell like a sewage lagoon. Some say they believe the algae is also responsible for swarms of mosquitoes in the area. (Wayne Vallevand/CBC)

Lin said he also wondersif the pond is responsible for theswarm of mosquitoes in Whistle Bend this summer.

"I couldn't even send my kids there to go to the backyard to jump on the trampoline. They just don't want to go there," he said. "I went into my backyard for like literally less than two minutes, and I got six or seven bites right away."

But another Whistle Bend resident, Ken Andre, said he doesn't think the mosquitoes come from the pond.

"They're from across the street from the pond over there; there's standing water," he said. "In a year like this, where we've got a lot of rain, there's always going to be mosquitoes."

As for the algae in the pond, Andre said it doesn't bother him as long as it doesn't smell.

"And if there is no smell this year for some strange reason, I think algae's kind of a natural thing with water that doesn't move, so that's fine," he said.

The pond was built to be a "rain garden," a retention and evaporation pond for storm run-off in Whistle Bend.

Algae blooms covered much of the same pond in 2016. (Vic Istchenko/CBC)

After the algae blooms were detected in the pond in 2016, the territorial Department of Community Services spent more than $900,000 on changes to prevent the blooms from returning, including a new system for pumping water.

A City of Whitehorse official told CBC News that staff are looking into the new algae growth.

Written by Donna Lee, based on a report by Dave Croft