Blue-green algae blooms often occur in warm, shallow and slow-moving water, where light and nutrients are available; however, blooms can occur in deeper lakes as well. They can be present in lakes in Elk/Beaver Lake and Thetis Lake regional parks.
Blooms are unpredictable. The location of algae blooms can change quickly. Blue-green algae can change their position in the water column (vertically) multiple times a day, and can move horizontally across surface waters due to wind and water currents. Because algae blooms are mobile, visual inspections are often our best indicator of potentially harmful concentrations of cyanotoxins.