FACT SHEET POLLEN

QUICK LINKS: Midland Water Levels...Events Calendar...2011 Partners' Reception...How to Donate to SSEA...2012 Tree Seedling Distribution

 


FLOATING POLLEN

Every year, during May and June, the SSEA office receives inquiries about a yellow scum, floating in sheltered areas of Severn Sound and near by lakes. This is a natural phenomenon that occurs in most of Northern Ontario where a forest ecosystem is prevalent. 

During spring and early summer, trees such as pine and birch release pollen in large quantities. Pollen grains are very small, and are easily carried with the wind to water surfaces. This surface cover is yellowish in colour, and may appear like a paint slick or algae bloom from a distance. It can also appear as clumps, and may collects in coves, or stain rocks as water levels drop later in the summer. On the water surface, the pollen grains become waterlogged, and sink to the bottom. In fact, it is this annual release and settling of pollen that allows scientists to determine past climate conditions using lake sediment cores by determining what tree species the pollen originated from, and in what quantities it is present.

Example of Floating PollenExample of Floating Pollen 


More Information...
 

Yellow Scum Phenomenon (Simcoe Muskoka District Health Unit)

Field guide to aquatic phenomena (University of Maine)

 

About Us | Beaches | Benthos | Climate | Contact Us | Donations | Employment Opportunities | Fact Sheets | Fish Habitat | Flow | Habitat | Hazardous Waste | Healthy Streams | Home | Inland Lakes | Links | Meetings | Members | Monitoring | Natural Shorelines | News | News Archive | ODWSP Funding | Open Water | Partners | Partner Appreciation | PGMN | Penetang Bay Project | Pollution Prevention | Programs & Projects | Publications | Resources | Severn Sound | Site Map | Source Water | SSEA | SSRAP | Stewardship | Stream Rehab | Sustainability Plan | Take A Little Lead Out! | Tree Seedlings | Trib | Water Quality | Volunteers | Water Levels | Well Aware | Wetland Evaluations | Working Around Water | Yellow Fish Road™ | BACK


Copyright © 2012 Severn Sound Environmental Association
Last modified: January 16, 2012

Send mail to sseainfo@midland.ca  with questions or comments about this web site.


This site is best viewed with Internet Explorer.