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Terry Gronwall

Monday September 11, 2023 Honeoye Lake Water Quality

Surface Water Temperature: ~73.6 F

Water Clarity: ~5.3 Feet

Lake Level: ~803.0 Feet above sea level

Observations: Monday (9/11/23), Over the last week the water clarity increased by ~0.3 feet to ~5.3 feet and the surface water temperature decreased by ~0.2 F to ~73.6 F. The small increase in water clarity was due to a slight reduction of algae in the water column in open water. We found a blue-green algae bloom of varying intensity from light to heavy lake wide today. In general, the blue-green algae bloom was heaviest in the South Lake Basin and less intense in the North Lake Basin. The wind was from the North blowing the algae to the South today. Some isolated near shore blooms were very intense with surface scum. Blooms, some of which may be severe, could be occurring at other isolated near shore locations around the whole lake. DEC advice is “HABs: Know it, Avoid it, Report it”


We found Anabaena (Dolchospermum) (Looks like a spring), Aphanizomenom (Looks like a leaf), Microcystis (Looks like a big blob with small cells), and Planktothrix (looks like a small rod). These are all blue-green algae species. You should be watchful for blue-green algae blooms lake wide. Expect to continue to see blue-green blooms over the next few weeks. See pictures below: More information on Microcystis and Anabaena can be found at: https://www.honeoyelakewatershed.org/habs



Several research studies have found that most of the phosphorus that fuels Honeoye Lake’s blue-green algae blooms is released from the lake bottom sediments when the lake’s dissolved oxygen level goes below 0.50 mg/L in the deeper parts of the lake. The dissolved oxygen (DO) level near the lake bottom today between 7-9 m (~23-30 feet) was 0.43-0.34 mg/L because the lake has already become restratified again. This means that potentially phosphorus will be released from the bottom sediments until the lake mixes again. You can see this most dramatically on the dissolved oxygen graph to the left. Today’s temperature and dissolved oxygen graphs are posted on the left.

The rainstorm run-off that occurred last Friday and Saturday could have also contributed nutrients to fuel our current isolated near shore blue-green algae blooms too. Lake level has risen about 0.1 feet (~1.2 inches) over the last few days.

Please report any Honeoye Lake HABs you observe to us and DEC by submitting a HABs report at:


Always use your own visual assessment before making contact with the lake water at this time of year as the blue-green algae situation can change daily if not hourly. Please regularly check the DEC HABs alert map for more detailed updates on Honeoye Lake HABs alerts:


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September FLCC Muller Field Station Events


Click on the link below to see the Septemeber Muller Field Station Newsletter:


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New York Safe Boating Class Certificate will be required of all boaters on this schedule:


If born on or after: You will need boating safety certificate to operate motorized vessel in:

January 1, 1988 2022

January 1, 1983 2023

January 1, 1978 2024


All operators of motorized vessels, regardless of age, will need a boating safety certificate by January 1, 2025.


Click on the link below for more information and the schedule of local NYS Safe Boating classes:



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Honeoye lake is included in the DEC's Big Panfish Study. Please click on the link below to read their Interim report:


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Please visit the Honeoye DEC Project website for more information on the Honeoye Lake Nutrient Inactivation (Alum Treatment) Project: Honeoye Lake Nutrient Inactivant Pilot Study (arcgis.com)





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Glacial History of Honeoye Lake

Please check out the new “Glacial History of Honeoye Lake” sign at Sandy Bottom Park.




Thank you to Dr. Bruce Gilman for the content, the Ontario County Water Resources Council for the funding, and the Finger Lakes Land Trust for the imagery.


More information on Honeoye Lake’s Geology History can be found on HLWTF web site:






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Ontario County Soil & Water Conservation District featured two Honeoye Lake watershed erosion control projects in their Summer 2023 Newsletter:


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Please click on this link for the Winter 2023 HLWTF Newsletter:







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- Click on this link to see the new HLWTF Honeoye Lake Watershed Storm Water Took Kit if you are planning any storm water projects on your property:







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Click on the blue outlined box that says "Log in / Sign up" in the upper right-hand corner of this page to sign-up to be notified when we update our weekly Honeoye Lake water quality blog.

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