Lake Tahoe is regaining its legendary clarity. This mysterious environmental shift may be helping

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LAKE TAHOE – At midnight, researchers aboard the vessel John Le Conte — an old 37-foot diesel-powered salmon trawler — dropped a net into icy cold waters.

What was surprising wasn’t what they caught. It’s what they didn’t: Invasive shrimp, which have long held sway over America’s most famous alpine lake, upsetting its balanced ecosystem.

In a rare piece of environmental good news, the harmful predators are almost gone. In their place are helpful creatures who are safely returning to eat algae and other fine particles. Scientists say this mysterious shift may be restoring the lake’s legendary clarity.

Chart of Lake Tahoe clarity since 1968Lake Tahoe’s average visibility has increased from 52.8 feet deep to a stunning 71.7 feet in the past three years, although this summer’s runoff has created some temporary murkiness. That’s like seeing seven stories underwater. In the last five months of 2022, the visibility increased to 80.6 feet, a level not seen since 1988, when it was 81 feet.

Daphnia tinted green after consuming algae. Zooplankton are small, microscopic animals. Some zooplankton, particularly Daphnia and Bosmina, are specialized to consume particles in that critical size range. (Photo courtesy of Tahoe Environmental Research Center)
Daphnia tinted green after consuming algae. Zooplankton are small, microscopic animals. Some zooplankton, particularly Daphnia and Bosmina, are specialized to consume particles in that critical size range. (Photo courtesy of Tahoe Environmental Research Center) 

“We haven’t had this level of clarity since the 1980s,” said Geoffrey Schladow, director of the UC Davis Tahoe Environmental Research Center

To study the dramatic restructuring of Lake Tahoe’s food web, the Center’s research vessel counts the presence of three different populations: algae; the predatory shrimp, called Mysis; and a slew of beneficial native species of algae-eating zooplankton, especially Daphnia and Bosmina, which are harbingers of good water quality.

In the past, the nighttime netting would capture 100 to 150 of the nocturnal shrimp, which rise to the surface of the lake in darkness.

Now it’s catching just two or three. “You can name them!” joked Schladow.

The lab is also monitoring lake clarity by measuring the depth to which a 10-inch white plate, called a Secchi disk, remains visible when lowered into the water. While 2023 data isn’t yet available, the lake’s average clarity jumped 10 feet between 2021 and 2022.

Scientists say the lake is clearest when the zooplankton Daphnia and Bosmina, which had once almost vanished, are most abundant.

“Biologically, things are changing,” said Schladow. “Things that weren’t in the lake before, suddenly they’re there. Things that were in the lake – they’ve disappeared. It’s very interesting, and we’re trying to piece it together.”

The mountain-ringed lake, which straddles the Nevada/California border in the Sierra Nevada, has long been considered a natural wonder.

Kayakers and paddleboarders explore the water at Kings Beach in Kings Beach, Calif., on Friday, June 30, 2023. According to research, Lake Tahoe is the clearest its been since the 1980s. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)
Kayakers and paddleboarders explore the water at Kings Beach in Kings Beach, Calif., on Friday, June 30, 2023. According to research, Lake Tahoe is the clearest its been since the 1980s. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group) 

Awed by its crystalline waters, writer Mark Twain proclaimed it “so singularly clear…that the boat seemed floating in the air. The water was not merely transparent, but dazzlingly, brilliantly so.” The lake owes its clarity to surrounding granite. Additionally, it has a relatively small watershed and is largely free of agricultural pollutants.

But in recent decades, the lake’s waters had grown increasingly cloudy — losing their world-famous clarity at a rate of nearly a foot and a half a year.

Lake Tahoe seemed destined to someday look like any other lake: a murky muddle in the mountains.

Alarmed, management agencies in the region have taken steps to reduce runoff from roads, gardens, golf courses and the construction of new multimillion-dollar homes. They report that more than 500,000 pounds of fine sediment and other clarity-harming contaminants are being kept out of the lake every year through roadway maintenance and erosion-control projects.

University of Nevada Reno student intern Katie Fielder displays mysis shrimp in lake water samples at the Tahoe Environmental Research Center in Incline Village, Nev., on Friday, June 30, 2023. According to research, Lake Tahoe is the clearest its been since the 1980s. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)
University of Nevada Reno student intern Katie Fielder displays mysis shrimp in lake water samples at the Tahoe Environmental Research Center in Incline Village, Nev., on Friday, June 30, 2023. According to research, Lake Tahoe is the clearest its been since the 1980s. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group) 

But a natural culprit also emerged: the non-native Mysis shrimp.

The shrimp’s introduction was an idea gone terribly wrong. In the early 1960s, the California and Nevada Departments of Fish and Game imported it from the Great Lakes, believing the shrimp would provide food for Lake Trout, which was Tahoe’s primary sport fish.

But the shrimp are sensitive to light — and once in the lake’s clear waters, they spend their days on the dark deep lake bottom. Every night, they undertake an enormous vertical migration to the surface.

Most fish are “sight feeders,” and don’t occupy the same water column during the day, said Katie Senft, the Center’s staff research associate. So the shrimp aren’t eaten.  And with few predators, they flourished.

Voracious consumers of zooplankton, the shrimp annihilated the Daphnia and Bosmina, she said. By 1971, those two important species largely disappeared from the lake.

But now something new is happening.

Chart on zooplankton vs. Mysis population in Lake TahoeStarting in 2012, just a few Mysis shrimp were found in samples from the lake’s Emerald Bay. In work that is now being expanded to other lake locations, Daphnia and Bosmina have reappeared in large numbers.

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