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Lake Pulse Toolbox  |  SKU: SL-SL-SW-E-S-MI1

Comprehensive Lake Microbiology Test

$398.00
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Description

While many water tests target only a few bacteria like E. coli, lake systems are far more biologically complex. This Comprehensive Lake Microbiology Test can detect early signs of microbial imbalance, such as harmful algal blooms, fungal overgrowth, or waterborne pathogens that impact humans, wildlife, and aquatic ecosystems. Whether you’re managing a drinking water source, protecting a recreational lake, or overseeing a habitat restoration, knowing the full microbial picture helps you take proactive, science-based action.

This test includes 1) aggregate tests (Total Bacteria, Coliform, Fungi, HPC) which measure overall biological activity, as well as 2) organism-level tests, which identify specific species present in the lake.  Aggregate tests are fast, cost-effective tools for routine monitoring and early warning (“Is something changing?”), whereas species identification is used for diagnosis and risk attribution (“What is causing the issue?”).  How they work together: Aggregate indicators signal when attention is needed; organism-specific tests guide targeted management actions—like a smoke alarm followed by a fire investigation.

Methodology:  SEM / NMR, except for Total HPC, which is SM 9215 B

MDL: 1   RL: 1 

Unit*: P/A  (*Particle Count is a #, and Total Bacteria, Total Coliform, Total Fungi, Total HPC are CFU/100mL)

What problem does this solve?

You’re seeking a comprehensive overview of microbiological activity in your lake. This analysis tests for 151 of the most commonly detected microorganisms that may signal potential ecological or water quality concerns, including:

1. Diatoms (Silica-shelled algae – ecological indicators)

Analytes: Achnanthidium, Amphora, Asterionella, Aulacoseira, Bacillaria, Caloneis, Cocconeis, Cyclotella, Cymbella, Diatoma, Diploneis, Discostella, Eunotia, Fragilaria, Gomphonema, Gyrosigma, Melosira, Meridion, Navicula, Nitzschia, Pinnularia, Planothidium, Psammodictyon, Stauroneis, Staurosira, Stephanodiscus, Surirella, Synedra, Tabellaria, Tryblionella

  • Changes in diatom communities are early warning signals of nutrient loading, acidification, warming, or altered mixing.
  • Some species indicate excess phosphorus or nitrogen, pointing to runoff or septic inputs.
  • Shifts toward certain taxa can signal declining water clarity, oxygen stress, or habitat degradation.
  • Widely used in regulatory assessments and long-term lake trend analysis.

2. Harmful or Nuisance Algae & Phytoplankton

Analytes: Ceratium, Chlorella, Mallomonas, Peridinium, Pseudo-nitzschia, Ulothrix

  • Can cause blooms that reduce clarity, create taste and odor issues, or shade aquatic vegetation.
  • Some genera (e.g., Pseudo-nitzschia) are associated with toxin production, posing ecological and health risks.
  • Blooms often reflect nutrient imbalance, warming temperatures, or altered hydrology.
  • Directly affect recreation, fisheries, and drinking water sources.

3. Zooplankton & Microfauna

Analytes: Keratella cochlearis, Testate amoebae (Trachelomonas), Ctenophora hunanensis

  • Reflect food-web balance and grazing pressure on algae.
  • Sensitive to oxygen depletion and temperature changes.
  • Changes can indicate ecosystem stress before visible water quality declines.
  • Important for understanding fish habitat and productivity.

4. Pathogenic & Opportunistic Bacteria (Public Health Concerns)

Analytes: E. coli, Enterococcus faecalis, Aeromonas hydrophila, Legionella pneumophila, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Helicobacter pylori, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Enterobacter spp., Burkholderia cepacia

  • Indicate fecal contamination, sewage intrusion, or failing septic systems.
  • Pose risks for swimmers, boaters, pets, and drinking-water intakes.
  • Some thrive in warm, stagnant, nutrient-rich conditions, increasing risk during heat waves.
  • Critical for beach closures, advisories, and liability management.

5. Environmental & Biofilm-Forming Bacteria

Analytes: Gallionella ferruginea, Sphaerotilus natans, Sphingomonas, Brevundimonas, Ralstonia pickettii, Roseomonas

  • Often associated with iron, organic loading, or low-oxygen conditions.
  • Can clog infrastructure, foul intakes, and degrade pipes, docks, and monitoring equipment.
  • Signal changing redox conditions and internal nutrient cycling.
  • Affect infrastructure longevity and maintenance costs.

6. Protozoa & Intestinal Parasites

Analytes: Entamoeba histolytica, Blastocystis hominis, Dientamoeba fragilis

  • Strong indicators of human or animal waste contamination.
  • Pose direct public-health risks, especially for children and immunocompromised individuals.
  • Suggest failures in wastewater treatment or stormwater management.
  • Often overlooked but critical for drinking-water safety.

7. Fungi, Yeasts & Molds (Environmental & Health Indicators)

Analytes: Aspergillus spp., Candida spp., Cryptococcus, Fusarium, Penicillium, Cladosporium, Stachybotrys, Trichoderma, Mucor, Rhodotorula, Sporothrix

  • Thrive in nutrient-rich, decaying organic matter.
  • Some are opportunistic pathogens affecting skin, lungs,
  • wounds.
  • Can signal excess organic pollution or shoreline degradation.
    Relevant for indoor–outdoor air quality near lakes and occupational exposure.

8. Dermatophytes & Skin-Associated Fungi

Analytes: Microsporum spp., Trichophyton spp., Trichosporon beigelii

  • Associated with skin, hair, and nail infections.
  • Risk increases with frequent water contact and warm conditions.
  • Relevant for public beaches, camps, and swimming areas.
  • Important for recreation safety and public messaging.

9. Particulates & Airborne Inputs

Analytes: Particle Count, Pollen Spores

  • Affect water clarity and light penetration, impacting aquatic plants.
  • Pollen contributes to organic nutrient loading in spring.
  • Fine particles can carry attached bacteria or metals.
  • Useful indicators of seasonal stress and watershed-lake connections.

10. Aggregate Indicators

Items 1–9 above (the long organism list) are specific identifications — they tell you exactly which organisms are present.

This test will also report to you how much biological activity is present in your lake overall, without naming individual organisms.

  • Total Bacteria
    Measures the overall bacterial load in the water. High levels can indicate organic pollution, warming water, or degraded ecosystem conditions that may stress aquatic life or increase health risks.
  • Total Coliform
    A group of indicator bacteria used to assess sanitary water quality. Their presence suggests possible contamination from runoff, septic systems, or wastewater, and signals the need for further testing (e.g., E. coli).
  • Total Fungi
    Captures the abundance of fungal organisms in the water. Elevated levels can indicate decaying organic matter, poor circulation, or nutrient imbalance, and some fungi may pose risks to immunocompromised individuals or aquatic organisms.
  • Total HPC (Heterotrophic Plate Count)
    Estimates the population of bacteria that feed on organic carbon. Useful for tracking overall biological activity, biofilm formation, and changes in water quality, especially in response to nutrient loading or temperature shifts.

In short: these tests provide early-warning indicators of biological stress, contamination, and changing lake conditions before more serious problems emerge.

Why This Matters for Lake Health & Safety

Together, these organisms form a biological dashboard of lake condition. Tracking them helps communities:

  • Detect pollution early
  • Protect swimmers and drinking water
  • Understand ecosystem change
  • Prioritize interventions before problems escalate

This is exactly why biological monitoring is foundational to proactive lake management, not just reactive testing.

What's included?

  • A complete lake microbiology test kit, shipped directly to you
  • All materials required for clean and simple sample collection
  • Step-by-step instructions for preparing your sample
  • Prepaid, 2-day return shipping to our certified partner lab
  • Full chain-of-custody and professional lab handling to ensure accuracy and reliability

Results

  • Your detailed results will be available within 8 business days of lab receipt
  • Results are uploaded directly to your lake’s Data Library via the Lake Pulse Portal
  • Data can be analyzed in the Lake Pulse Analytics Hub, used to generate alerts, or shared with stakeholders
  • A downloadable lab report is also provided in your lake’s Data Sources section for easy access and long-term reference

Need help interpreting your results or planning next steps? The Lake Pulse Boathouse is here to support subscribers anytime.


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