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Great Lakes Today was created to highlight issues affecting the lakes. The main partners are WBFO (Buffalo), ideastream (Cleveland) and WXXI (Rochester).Browse more coverage here. Major funding for Great Lakes Today is provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, a private corporation funded by the American People. Additional funding comes from the Northeast Ohio Regional Sewer District.

Planes, Drone Monitor Harmful Algae in Lake Erie

A photo captured by Ansari 9-24 [Dr. Rafat Ansari]

Algae blooms continue to color western Lake Erie a deep green. Now researchers and scientists want to know more about toxins produced by the algae -- and they’re getting help from some unlikely sources.

Three thousand feet up in the air, Dr. Rafat Ansari flies his small, two-seater plane over Lake Erie.

He starts west of Cleveland and flies over the lake's islands to Toledo, and then north into Michigan. The round trip flight is about 260 miles.

Along the way, he snaps photos – about 1,500 of them – with three tiny cameras attached to his plane. 


Dr. Ansari (left) and Schubert [Elizabeth Miller/ideastream]

Ansari is a volunteer who helps scientists monitor algae blooms.  That’s a big change from his day job at NASA Glenn Research Center in Cleveland.

“I’m a researcher in biomedical optics,” says Ansari.  “In general, my interest is in developing technologies to monitor health of astronauts and people.”

It started years ago, when Ansari and his wife were flying from Chicago to Cleveland.  They noticed the green lake and set out to learn more.

By 2014, Ansari started a citizen science  program, recruiting friend and fellow pilot Terry Schubert. Once or twice a week, they fly over Lake Erie.

Their photos are provided to scientists at the EPA, NASA and NOAA. They’re also available to the public through a  website.

Schubert, a retired teacher, says the images help more than scientists.  “Anybody can take one look at the water and say, ‘Geez, this is the stuff I’m drinking?’ And so it really brings out the true condition of what’s happening on the lake."

A recent photo shows streaks of light green amid a lake of darker green water, evidence of algae and a toxin called microcystin.

Ansari and Schubert have spent about $1,000 for the cameras and all their tools.  And then there’s the cost of fuel.


The cameras Ansari and Schubert use on their private planes [Elizabeth Miller/ideastream]

But for the two men, it’s worth the cost to give back to their community.

“It’s very important for human health – as well as for industrial processes, industries, fisheries, for recreation,” explains Ansari. “I am inspired by that idea.”

Schubert agrees.  “We must protect what we have, and not throw it away or just ignore it and let it be taken away by unknowing or uncaring attitudes.”

Ansari has added other pilots to his roster of citizen scientists. Folks in Minnesota, California, and Utah have been called on to take photos of waterways in their states.

Scientists studying the algae don’t just rely on these pilots. To monitor smaller bodies of water, they look to NASA – and drones.

NASA Glenn is taking the lead on this project, developing technology that would attach a camera to the drone. 

Drew Lawrence, part of the NASA team, says the images aren’t regular photos – they actually provide data.

“You see all these peaks,” says Lawrence.  “Certain peaks basically indicate certain material – water, dirt, pavement, or the algae.”


The camera, called a Hyperspectral Imaging System, integrated onto the drone [Rami Daud/NASA Glenn Research Center]

Each peak is a sort of signature – so when it shows up on an image, scientists can tell what kinds of materials are in a river or lake.

But the images from the camera are only for use by scientists, analysts, and researchers.

Dr. Joseph Ortiz, a geology professor at Kent State University, is one of the researchers who uses images from the citizen science flights and the drone. 

“If we had an aircraft and a small lightweight sensor that could be used to go out to lots of different places, now we become much more flexible in the type of work we can do,” he says.

Then, he says, scientists could develop an early warning system for algae blooms.

Ortiz recently published his research in  Frontiers in Marine Science.  The research focuses on how to isolate the signal produced by toxic cyanobacteria using a hyperspectral imager.


Drew Lawrence, Dr. Dionne Hernandez-Lugo, and Ian Haskin [Elizabeth Miller/ideastream]

Meanwhile, Dr. Dionne Hernandez-Lugo and her NASA team are refining the drone imager, which they say is cheaper than a plane and can fly lower.

Eventually, her team would like to make the imaging system commercially available.  It could have a wide range of uses – like showing a farmer how his crops are doing.

“We were designing it not only thinking about a NASA use, but how can the public use it, what other uses people could have for this type of system,” she says.

They have continued to test it, and hope to use it regularly next year.

Watch an interview with Ansari and Schubert on WVIZ/PBS Ideas here.