Managing a water body shouldn’t feel like firefighting, but for most water managers and operators, that’s exactly what it becomes.
Algae blooms appear. Water clarity drops. Complaints come in. Action is taken. The problem disappears. Then it comes back. Again. And again.
This cycle isn’t bad luck. It’s the result of how water bodies have traditionally been managed.
Most traditional approaches focus on what’s visible:
Algae is treated with algaecides, nutrient buildup is largely left unchecked until it becomes a problem, and sediment is only addressed after years of accumulation, often through major, disruptive dredging projects.
Each of these has its place, but they all share the same limitation. They treat symptoms, not the system.
Algae is not the root problem, it’s simply the visible result of an imbalanced system.
When nutrients continue to circulate, when oxygen levels drop, when sediment becomes unstable, the conditions for decline remain. Even if the surface looks clear.
Research shows that in many lakes, sediments become a major source of phosphorus through a process known as internal loading, continuously recycling nutrients back into the water column and promoting further algal growth.
https://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/529457/
Water bodies are not static. They are dynamic systems.
Nutrients enter from external sources like runoff. But over time, the bigger issue becomes internal.
Phosphorus accumulates in sediment. Oxygen levels drop. Nutrients are released back into the water column. The process repeats itself every season.
Studies have shown internal phosphorus release can contribute a significant portion of total nutrient load within a lake, meaning improvements at the surface can quickly reverse if underlying conditions are not addressed.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15537926/
That is why many lakes require ongoing chemical intervention just to maintain acceptable conditions.
Short-term fixes often look cost-effective, until you step back and look at the bigger picture:
Without addressing internal loading, recovery times can extend for years or even decades as phosphorus continues to be released from sediment.
There is a shift happening in water management.
A move away from reaction, toward prevention. A focus on long-term stability rather than short-term improvement through isolated treatments.
This means looking at the whole water body, not just the surface:
When these factors are managed together, the system begins to stabilise.
And when the system stabilises, the symptoms stop returning.