WNEM TV 5 Great Lakes coastal wetlands focus of big grant to CMU

Great Lakes coastal wetlands focus of big grant to CMU

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photo Beaver Island ctsy. CMU photo Beaver Island ctsy. CMU
MT. PLEASANT, MI (WNEM) -
With a $10 million federal grant and support from the EPA, a team led by members from Central Michigan University works to protect vital geographic areas that serve as nature's filter in maintaining water quality in the Great Lakes.
 
Film crews followed Institute for Great Lakes Research scientists from Central Michigan and the University of Notre Dame, creating a documentary on their study to preserve and restore the Great Lakes Coastal Wetlands. Preserving coastal wetlands is critical to enhancing water quality in the Great Lakes, which represent 21 percent of the world's fresh water supply.
 
Wetlands help support a $7.5 billion per year commercial and sport fishing industry and serve as a filter for pollution before entering the Great Lakes. Additionally, they provide major breeding and migratory habitats for wildlife, and some coastal wetlands are crucial for flood control.
 
"Coastal wetlands are critical to the health of the Great Lakes," said Don Uzarski, founding director of CMU's Institute for Great Lakes Research. "We've already lost 50 percent of the coastal wetlands surrounding the Great Lakes. We can't afford to lose more."
 
"By boosting the awareness of our impact and long-term effect on these watersheds, people are becoming more educated on how important these bodies of water are to our world," Uzarski said.
 
The coastal wetland monitoring program supported by the CMU-administered grant measures the ecosystem health of every coastal wetland in the Great Lakes basin, searching for trends in health and water quality. Researchers from 10 universities have been collecting samples of water, vegetation, invertebrates, fish, amphibians and birds.
 
Universities collaborating as part of the grant include CMU, Notre Dame, Grand Valley State University, University of Minnesota Duluth, University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, University of Wisconsin-River Falls, Lake Superior State University, University of Windsor, SUNY Brockport and Oregon State University. Agencies involved in the project are the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality, Environment Canada and Bird Studies Canada.
 
The Great Lakes watershed covers areas in Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, New York and Pennsylvania, as well as two Canadian provinces.
 
Watch the WaterLogged Wetland Documentary at http://go.cmich.edu/pages/epa.shtml
 
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