State of our Waters in the Cincinnati Region.
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State of our Waters in the Cincinnati Region with Mike Miller President of Rivers Unlimited and OEPA Water Chemist
What can we do to protect the legacy of our watersheds? Greater Cincinnati is blessed with many kinds of freshwaters from its four major rivers, its sewersheds, its 35 lakes, its flood control reservoirs, retention ponds, and wetlands. The new wetlands of the Mill Creek help to slow and improve flood waters.
And yet our water is degraded by sewage, NPDES discharges, agricultural drainage and nonpointsource pollution coming from impervious surface and streets, hazardous waste storage sites, brownfields, and abandoned landfills. The good news is that Ohio is working to improve water quality from its row crop agriculture and from recently recognized pollutants, especially PFOS and PFOA in its large rivers.
Mike Miller is a professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Environmental Studies at UC where he taught for 40 years. Mike has researched aquatic ecosystem structure and function on rivers and lakes in Midwest & SW Ohio, arctic Russia, and around the equator working on paleolimnology with lake sediments, water chemistry, algal composition, zooplankton dynamics, benthic macroinvertebrates, and fish ecology.
The forum will be held Monday, May 6, 2024 at 7 - 9 pm.
For in person attendees, here is the following address:
Mt. Auburn Presbyterian Church
103 William Howard Taft Road
Cincinnati OH 45219
Free parking behind church.
Join us early at 6:30 pm for a Meet & Greet!
For on-line virtual participants, follow the link below to register in advance to join via Zoom. https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZcqd-6urD8tHt1sn4pDKKDg4r61bPC5WR8N#/registration
State of our Waters in the Cincinnati Region.