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Dry summer helps push Lake Michigan water levels to near-record lows

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(MCT) — CHICAGO — As Lake Michigan water levels have dipped lower and lower this year, so too has shoreline fisherman Patrick Finley.

A leisurely stand, cast and reel routine will no longer do. Actually catching a fish in such shallow water calls for methods more extreme.

“You literally have to lie down to land a fish with the net,” said Finley, 30, who has been fishing the lake for about 20 years and works at Henry’s Sport & Bait in Bridgeport. “The water is extremely low — the worst I’ve ever seen.”

In fact, recent U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reports found that water levels on Lakes Michigan and Huron touched the all-time low for October one day last week and are likely to recede to record levels in the coming months due largely to this year’s dry winter and relentlessly arid summer.

As the water has ebbed, more than recreational fishers have taken note.

Submerged rocks, trees and debris have already surfaced — new fixtures along the widening shores. Lakers carrying weighty cargo, like coal, iron ore and limestone, have had to lighten loads to make it to harbor. And, for a few days this month, the Corps limited the use of the Chicago Harbor Lock to prevent river water from running back into the lowered lake.

Though the lows have been driven by this year’s weather, Lakes Michigan and Huron have drifted beneath their long-term average since the late 1990s, stoking worries that the largest group of freshwater lakes on Earth — containing a fifth of the world’s fresh water — will become a consistently diminishing resource in the coming decades.

“People are concerned and worried and rightly so,” said Tim Eder, executive director of the Great Lakes Commission. “What we are seeing could be connected to climate change. However it is also important to note that the Great Lakes have always fluctuated.”

Formed by retreating glaciers more than 10,000 years ago, the Great Lakes have been compared to “a series of interconnected bathtubs” that hold an estimated 6 quadrillion gallons of water, according to the Great Lakes Commission. Water from Lake Superior — the headwater of the system — runs down to Lakes Michigan and Huron before rushing into Lake Erie, over Niagara Falls into Lake Ontario and eventually the Atlantic Ocean.

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