Student Research - Mission Earth
Save the Dogs
Organization(s):McKinley STEMM Academy
Country:United States of America
Student(s):Devon Bailey
Aaliyah Barnhisel
Sharae Berry
Donevin Blake
Ma'Niya Daniel
Brandon Farmer
Donyel Forrest
Ivo Hackett
Blaze Haley
Ki'Andre Hicks
Mekhi Jackson
Key'Von Jones-Wyley
Jade Latson
Mckenzy Lounsbury
Luis Osley
Michael Smith
Qua'Ta Snipes
Uriah Staples
Grade Level:Upper Primary (grades 3-5, ages 8-11)
GLOBE Educator(s):Cynthia Madanski
Contributors:
Report Type(s):Mission Earth Report
Protocols:Dissolved Oxygen, Freshwater Macroinvertebrates, Nitrates, Water Temperature, Water Transparency, pH
Presentation Poster:
View Document
Language(s):English
Date Submitted:11/10/2020
The Toledo area is notorious for having harmful algal blooms in the summer months. We read articles about toxic algae, including an article highlighting a current algal bloom happening in the summer of 2020 in Toledo. With this relevance to our own lives, we asked the question “Is the water in Toledo safe enough for Mohawk and other dogs to swim in?” Last year, students found the water was safe. We wanted to see if it is safe again this year, or if anything has changed in the Maumee River at Sidecut Metropark.
The GLOBE protocols used to answer this research question were water temperature, fecal coliform bacteria, Biochemical Oxygen Demand, phosphate, nitrate, turbidity, total solids, water transparency, pH, dissolved oxygen, and macroinvertebrates. We collected data once for all protocols, between 9:07-10:57am on October 8, 2020. We used past results from October 2019 to compare. The results showed that the water quality was worse in 2020.