The Stormwater Blogs

More from this blogger

Stormwater Editor's Blog

  • RSS
  • Save
  • Print
  • Email
Sunday, January 10, 2010 7:00 PM

Some Like It Hot

By: Kaspersen, Janice: Stormwater Editor Comments

The warmer temperature of urban stormwater runoff is a problem more often than not: it raises the temperature of salmon-bearing streams in the Pacific Northwest and can alter entire aquatic ecosystems. Some waters are 303(d)-listed for temperature, and cities plant trees to try to shade runoff channels and prevent the urban hardscape from heating the water to unacceptably high levels.

Last week in Florida, though, a few critters appeared to be happy with the warmer stormwater flows. As temperatures plummeted, water in the Indian River Lagoon was in the 40s and 50s—but stormwater outfalls were sending 70-degree water into the lagoon, attracting a number of endangered manatees.

The animals, which do best in water 68 degrees or warmer, shouldn’t really be as far north as they are, but warm water from power plants has allowed them to move into the area. Last week they crowded into a canal near Satellite Beach, attracting crowds. You can see a video of the manatees here. Biologists are monitoring the animals.

What Do You Think?

 

Be the first to tell us what you think!

Post a Comment

Note from the Editor: The content that appears in our "Comments" section is supplied to us by outside, third-party readers, and organizations and does not necessarily reflect the view of our staff or Forester Media—in fact, we may not agree with it—and we do not endorse, warrant, or otherwise take responsibility for any content supplied by third parties that appear on our website. All comments are subject to approval.

CAPTCHA Validation
CAPTCHA
Code: