Mar 17 2010 | Great Lakes Echo | One Comment

Great Lakes resource managers are turning to biological controls to deal with aggressive invasive species.

Garlic mustard, a woodland invader, smothers native plants and poisons the soil in forested areas, campgrounds and backyards.

But in Europe, where it originated, the plant is kept in check by natural controls. Researchers think these controls will help limit garlic mustard in the Great Lakes region. See video.

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Mar 15 2010 | Rachael Gleason | No Comment
Moose populations in northeast Minnesota and Ontario are caused by low survival, reproduction rates.

Warmer temperatures may be the cause of declining moose populations in northeast Minnesota.

A model by the state’s natural resources department shows moose numbers dropping by 15 percent each year over the long-term.

Mar 15 2010 | Rachael Gleason | No Comment

Explore the Great Lakes on your own terms with this customizable map-building tool.

The Great Lakes Information Network’s interactive map comprises data from a variety of regional agencies and organizations.

Mar 12 2010 | Andrew Norman | No Comment
Growers thinned trees and removed ground cover to plant their marijuana crop in Washington’s North Cascades National Park. The loose soil speeds erosion. Image: National Park Service

Mexican drug trafficking organizations are expanding east, cultivating near Great Lakes states’ large consumer bases like Detroit and Chicago, police say. It’s an often violent, lucrative form of manifest destiny in reverse.

A recent report rates Michigan’s progress in lowering the risk of eating fish as poor.

Officials blame the failure to reduce the atmospheric deposition of mercury and on PCB contaminants. And stormwater runoff and sewage overflows are an increasing concern.

Mar 9 2010 | Alice Rossignol | One Comment
Red-tailed hawk “Savanna” – former hunting partner to John Blakeman – returns to his fist after going after a rabbit. Photo: John Blakeman

The first falconry field meet in North America was in 1938 in Pennsylvania. It’s a sport that continues to be cherished throughout the Great Lakes states.

“It’s like a front row seat to an I-max movie to nature,” said Kory Koch, communications director of the Michigan Hawking Club.

Mar 9 2010 | Haley Walker | No Comment

Nearly 19 percent of Michigan residents reported a time in the past 12 months when they lacked enough money to buy food.

The statistic comes from a national Gallup survey of more than 530,000 Americans.

Mar 8 2010 | Rachael Gleason | No Comment
This mashup allows users to find various Minnesota animals.

Many state natural resources departments in the Great Lakes region produce interactive maps to illustrate wildlife areas.

Some are designed for hunters; others just show where common fish and animals are located.

Mar 5 2010 | Great Lakes Echo | 2 Comments
Fall colors on Humbug Marsh. Photo:

A decade ago, development was proposed for the Detroit River’s Humbug Marsh. Citizens pressured government for protection. And recently the site received international recognition.

Mar 3 2010 | Great Lakes Echo | No Comment

Chickens are free to roam the student organic farm at Michigan State University.

Unlike confined chickens, free-range chickens interact with with plants and other creatures for the good of the farm system.

See video.

Mar 2 2010 | Rachael Gleason | One Comment

The University of Pennsylvania earned the number one spot on the United States Environmental Protection Agency’s top green power purchasers list.

The EPA compiles the quarterly top 20 lists to spur competition among schools.