Treatment rids Cabot Canal in Cape Coral of blue-green algae

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Canal cleared of blue-green algae. Photo via WINK News.
Canal cleared of blue-green algae. Photo via WINK News.

As the sun sets in southeast Cape Coral, it appears for most homeowners that blue-green algae is a thing of the past.

That’s good news for Barbara Kozma.

“Oh the smell was really bad,” Kozma said. “We didn’t even want to be outside.”

Kozma lives on the Cabot Canal near the Midpoint Memorial Bridge. It looks like 10 weeks of bacteria treatment effectively cleared up the once nasty, thick blue-green algae.

“We’ve lived here for 10 years,” Kozma said. “We’ve never seen anything like what we had.”

In an email to Cape Coral’s mayor, Ecological Laboratories said they have seen improvements in water quality and clarity thanks to their treatment.

From when the treatment started to now, they can see 6 inches further into the water.

“Now the water quality looks a lot better and there’s a lot of wildlife,” Joe Coviello said, mayor of Cape Coral. “I’ve seen fish jumping.”

The bacteria uses up the nutrients the blue-green algae would otherwise use to grow. Coviello said on a five acre lake, the treatment costs about $25,000.

But with canals across Cape Coral now cleared of algae without any treatment, we asked: How do we know the bacteria cleared up this canal?

“We saw marked improvements right off the bat,” Coviello said. “Even when the canals had algae in it, there was an improvement. Especially with the thick algae that was at the end of this canal.”

Coviello said the bacteria treatment is definitely an option Cape Coral would consider if and most likely when blue-green algae returns.

“It was good to see they had a solution,” Kozma said. “It had been such a long time where it just seemed to be getting worse every day.”

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