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Great Lakes Echo - Environmental news of the Great Lakes region

Great Lakes Echo (https://greatlakesecho.org/)

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‘None of this is normal’ – Michigan watches winter drought ahead of growing season

By Capital News Service | 8 hours ago

By Sonja Krohn

The dry conditions and drought that Michigan is experiencing this winter may adversely affect the upcoming crop growing season.

Conservation, research and community collaboration aid in successful 2026 Black Lake sturgeon season

A sturgeon rests on ice.

The 2026 sturgeon season on Black Lake in Michigan lasted all of 48 minutes before the annual quota – six – was reached. There were 653 anglers competing for them.

Shifting farm economy means changes for rural communities

By Lillian Williams

The shrinking number of farms in Michigan – down by about 1,300 between 2023 and 2024 – and the trend of existing farms to expand to survive is changing the culture of rural communities.

Climate migration may not dramatically reshape city growth, study finds

By Isabella Figueroa Nogueira

A recent study featuring Grand Rapids, Michigan suggests that climate migration may not significantly change how some cities grow.

More Headlines

Michigan farmers face bankruptcies, other financial challenges
Water is Life, Six Nations lead international approach to long-standing water insecurity
Fight climate change from your garden with ‘birdscaping’

Climate

  • The projected path of a comet
    Scientists debunk UFO claims about rare interstellar comet 

    By Clara Lincolnhol  Online rumors are swirling that a comet from another solar system might be a UFO — but Michigan State University researchers say that’s pure speculation. It’s definitely a comet, they insist, with no credible reason to believe otherwise. 

More climate

Wildlife

  • Henderson holding a swan
    From otters to butterflies: How Minnesota became a pioneer in nongame wildlife conservation

    By Kyrmyzy Turebayeva In the late 1970s, when most wildlife conservation programs in the United States focused almost exclusively on game species, a quiet but historic shift began in Minnesota. It was here that one of the nation’s first state programs dedicated to protecting so-called nongame wildlife emerged from butterflies and bats to bald eagles and river otters. That story is now told in detail by Carrol Henderson in his new book, “A National Legacy: Fifty Years of Nongame Wildlife Conservation in Minnesota."

More wildlife

Energy

  • Michigan pushes toward 100% clean energy by 2040 despite funding cuts

     By Bauyrzhan Zhaxylykov Given dramatic changes in federal energy policy and spending, as well as possible reduction in state financial support for alternative energy projects, is Michigan still on target to reach its clean energy goals?

More energy

Nearshore

  • Headshot of Ethan Theuerkauf
    Growth in shoreline armoring is reshaping Michigan’s Lake Michigan coast

    By Kyrmyzy Turebayeva A new study documents a fivefold increase in shoreline armoring along Lake Michigan’s Eastern coast.

More nearshore

Waste

  • Michigan is last state without a septic system code. Will that change?

    By Justin Fox Clausen Lawmakers are making another effort to adopt Michigan’s first statewide septic code with mandatory inspections, intended to protect drinking water from contamination. It’s the only state without one.

More waste

Recreation

  • Book explores Hemingway’s experiences ‘up north’

    By Julia Belden An Alanson-raised author whose book on Ernest Hemingway’s ties to Northern Michigan explains the region’s influence on the novelist’s work. The book “Picturing Hemingway’s Michigan,” has just been released in paperback.

More recreation

Solutions

  • Miller in the woods
    Invasive species expert teaches volunteers to overcome ‘plant blindness’

    By Anna Ironside Carolyn Miller is a botanical technologist at Michigan State University’s W.J. Beal Botanical Garden, as well as a master’s student. Her work has made her a driving force behind restoration projects on campus and beyond. From invasive species removal days to a growing movement to replace traditional turf lawns with native landscapes, Miller doesn’t quit.

Agriculture

  • A heavy infestation of tar spot on a corn plant
    Corn season means return of farmers’ worries about tar spot fungus

    By Victoria Witke Jacob Faist of Jackson County is among the state’s farmers worried about tar spot, an emerging disease in corn and silage fed to dairy cows. It can lower crop yield, reduce the nutritional value of the corn and reduce milk production. According to a study, Michigan and the Great Lakes region are particularly vulnerable. Researchers did the study in Branch, Ottawa, Ingham and Barry counties. Top producing counties include Lenawee and Ionia.

Water

  • A researcher on a boat lowers a water sampling device into a lake.
    Research centers in the Great Lakes region change the scope of global freshwater ecology

    A new study examines the uniqueness of work that research centers conduct in the Great Lakes region, highlighting their importance amid dramatic changes in federal funding.

Cities & Suburbs

  • Data center concerns lead to push for a one-year moratorium on projects

    By Karlee VanAntwerp Critics of the proliferation of data centers are calling for a one-year moratorium on the approval of new projects.

About Great Lakes Echo

Environmental news of the Great Lakes region from the Knight Center for Environmental Journalism at Michigan State University.

Recent Articles

  • Why Michigan’s rural residents are reluctant to drive electric vehicles
    By Capital News Service
  • More funding approved to improve the Greater Chicago Area’s public transit
    By Joshua Kim and Great Lakes Echo
  • Book helps residents, visitors, use Chicago’s public transit to access recreational sites
    By Joshua Kim and Great Lakes Echo
  • Solar projects bring larger economic gains to smaller communities, study shows
    By Isabella Figueroa Nogueira and Great Lakes Echo
  • How seeds from the past are saving a unique flower of the Great Lakes
    By Kyrmyzy Turebayeva and Great Lakes Echo
  • Michigan’s water infrastructure sees improvements, work still needs to be done
    By Clara Lincolnhol and Great Lakes Echo
  • Mussels in a green net.
    Endangered spectaclecase mussels reintroduced into the Chippewa River
    By Ada Tussing and Great Lakes Echo
  • Michigan allocates $77 million to clean thousands of contaminated sites
    By Clara Lincolnhol and Capital News Service
  • Winter makes curved roads dangerous; researchers seek solutions
    By Eric Freedman and Great Lakes Echo
  • The cover of “Dead Moose on Isle Royale: Off Trail with the Citizen Scientists of the Wolf-Moose Project." The cover is moose antlers on the ground.
    Great Lakes books for your holiday gift list 
    By Eric Freedman and Great Lakes Echo
  • Great Lakes Echo

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