“Sometimes, it’s just the environmental mix that allows it to grow one year and maybe not in others. There are a lot of variables. “It’s not something that’s been seen much in the United States at all, that we know of, (although) it may have gone unnoticed or unreported.” Ohioans likely are familiar with blue-green algae, the cyanobacteria that can kill pets and affect the liver and nerves in humans. Some species of cyanobacteria can even appear red, but this wasn’t that, Pierce said. In fact, not much is known about Euglena sanguinea, but it can turn the water red and produces a toxin similar to fire-ant venom, according to EPA reports. Data is limited on human exposure to the red algae, but it has been linked to livestock fatalities.
There is a lake in Texas that has the same issue:
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Nothing really to worry about. The ecosystems on earth change all the time. We just have to live with it.