Bass Lake Water Quality Trend
Lake County, Michigan · 2020–2023 · 4 years of data
Bass Lake water quality has been improving over the 4-year window from 2020–2023, based on EPA Water Quality Portal samples. The lake holds an overall Grade B today.
Water Clarity (Secchi)
↑ ImprovingPhosphorus
Insufficient data (0 years, need 4+).
Chlorophyll-a
Insufficient data (3 years, need 4+).
Reading Bass Lake's trajectory
Across 4 years of EPA sampling, Bass Lake's overall water quality is trending toward improvement. Per-metric: clarity is trending toward improvement; chlorophyll-a is trending toward improvement. Trends like this rarely happen by accident — they usually trace back to a specific upstream change (watershed management, restored riparian buffer, reduced nutrient input) and are worth checking against the state environmental agency's restoration record for the lake.
The 4-year sample window is short — long enough to flag possible directional shifts but not long enough to be confident the trend is structural rather than weather-driven. A single wet year, a single dry year, or a recent change in sampling location can pull a short-window trend in either direction. Treat the direction as suggestive rather than definitive; the absolute Grade and §303(d) listing status carry more weight than the trend over this period.
Clarity (Secchi depth), phosphorus, and chlorophyll-a are the three metrics most consistently sampled across years and most useful as trend indicators. Clarity captures the visible signal — how deep you can see into the water. Phosphorus is the primary nutrient driving algal growth in most lakes. Chlorophyll-a measures algal biomass directly. Together they describe the same underlying water-quality state from three angles; when all three agree on direction, the trend signal is strong.
How to read this
- Clarity (Secchi depth): deeper visibility is better. An upward line means the water is getting clearer.
- Phosphorus & Chlorophyll-a: lower is better. A downward line means fewer nutrients fueling algae growth.
- Year-to-year variability is normal. Weather, sample timing, and short-window data all add noise. Look at direction, not single-year jumps.
Methodology
Each metric is calculated from EPA Water Quality Portal samples. Annual values are the median of all samples taken that year. The trend direction comes from a linear regression of those annual medians; we classify it as improving, declining, or stable when the change-per-year is below 2% of the long-run mean. The current cache spans roughly 2020–2023, which is a short window for climate-scale claims. Use this page to spot direction and as a launch point — link out to the EPA WQP for the raw record before citing as evidence.