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Photo by Mose Buchele/KUT. Within the green sludge on the surface of the lake, you'll find a complex habitat for plants, insects and animals seeking shelter and food.

A lot of that green sludge in Lady Bird Lake is actually a sign of a healthy waterway

Wednesday, July 26, 2023 by Mose Buchele, KUT

If you’ve been near Austin’s Lady Bird Lake lately, you might have noticed a little less water is visible. Parts of the lake, especially along the shores and inlets, are covered in mats of green vegetation. It can look goopy, maybe even dangerous, given the presence of toxic blue-green algae in local waterways.

But most of what you’re seeing is not only harmless, it’s a sign of a thriving body of water, says Dr. Brent Bellinger, a scientist with Austin’s Watershed Protection Department who monitors the lake.

Bellinger says the majority of the vegetation these days is a native water plant called fanwort or cabomba, and it flowers underwater one of the few that does. You can spot the delicate-looking blooms from shore with a careful eye.

Cabomba is present in the lake year-round, but it is more likely to grow to the surface, or become detached from the lake bottom and float, in the summer once it has grown to maturity.

Within that cabomba you can find a complex habitat for other plants, insects and animals seeking shelter and food – almost like a kelp forest.

Brent Bellinger with the Austin Watershed Department says the majority of the vegetation you'll see on Lady Bird Lake is a native water plant called fanwort or cabomba.

Photo by Mose Buchele/KUT. Brent Bellinger with the Austin Watershed Protection Department says the majority of the vegetation you’ll see on Lady Bird Lake is a native water plant called fanwort or cabomba.

“You’ll see a lot of fish, turtles that are mixed in with the plants. There’s carnivorous plants (called) bladder wort,” says Bellinger, who met KUT by a cluster of floating cabomba on a recent sweltering morning. “The health of the ecosystem goes up with the presence of these plants.”

There has been more vegetation, including cabomba, in the lake in recent years. That’s due to drought, heat and nutrient-rich runoff from fertilizer, septic waste and other sources.

The runoff provides food for vegetation; the drought means there have been no big storms to “flush” the vegetation out and the heat has warmed up the water.

“In general, biology accelerates with warmer temperatures, plant growth, algae growth, et cetera,” Bellinger says. “All these things are going to be (growing) at a higher rate in these warmer waters.”

He says the harmless plants, like cabomba, are actually helping the waterway by gobbling up excess nutrients that could otherwise encourage more algae growth.

But, he warns, the lake is still home to blue-green algae, also known as toxic cyanobacteria. So, even if most of the stuff you see on the water is harmless, the city urges boaters or paddleboarders to avoid areas of high vegetation.

“Stick to the open water. Stay away from the margins in the backwaters,” Bellinger says.

This story was produced as part of the Austin Monitor’s reporting partnership with KUT.

The Austin Monitor’s work is made possible by donations from the community. Though our reporting covers donors from time to time, we are careful to keep business and editorial efforts separate while maintaining transparency. A complete list of donors is available here, and our code of ethics is explained here.

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