‘Water lettuce’ chokes tourism, fishing at El Salvador lake

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Government employees working to remove a huge carpet of aquatic plants (Pistia stratiotes) from Lake Suchitlan in El Salvador on Aug 12.

Government employees working to remove a huge growth of water lettuce from Lake Suchitlan in El Salvador on Aug 12.

PHOTO: AFP

Follow topic:
  • El Salvador's Lake Suchitlan is overrun with water lettuce, impacting fishing and tourism due to pollution.
  • Water lettuce thrives on heavy metals and pollutants, turning the lake into a green field and deterring visitors.
  • Dredging removes some plants, but addressing the pollution source is crucial to prevent future growth (AFP).

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SUCHITOTO, El Salvador – The waters of El Salvador’s Lake Suchitlan are normally busy with fishermen and tourists – but in 2025, you would be forgiven for thinking it is not a lake at all.

The wetland, known for its biodiversity, has been overrun by a floating plant that feeds on chemical pollution, almost completely covering its surface and making it look like a lush, light-green field.

Fed by the waters of the mighty Lempa River, Suchitlan is a 13,500ha artificial lake built around 1976, and supplies the Cerron Grande hydroelectric power station.

The massive spread of Pistia stratiotes, commonly known as water lettuce, has paralysed the local tourism and fishing trades, leaving boatmen without income and restaurants on the shore empty.

“The truth is that the (plant) has affected us every year, but now it has gone too far. Today, it’s completely covered,” Ms Julia Alvarez, a 52-year-old boat operator, told AFP.

The reservoir is home to rich biodiversity with migratory birds on its islands, but now, most of its surface is covered by water lettuce, whose spread has been aided by wind and heavy rains.

Boatman Felicito Monroy said the phenomenon meant he has not been able to fish for 10 days.

The plant’s proliferation is hitting restaurants hard, too.

“Today, people just come, look, and leave right away. They don’t enjoy the rides, they don’t stay to taste the dishes, because the attraction is the water, the lake,” said Mr Johnny Anzora, a 44-year-old restaurant waiter.

A heron flying over Lake Suchitlan on Aug 12. The reservoir is home to rich biodiversity with migratory birds on its islands, but now, most of it is covered by water lettuce.

PHOTO: AFP

Biologist and researcher Cidia Cortes explained that the growth was driven by an influx of “pollution” to the lake, carried by tributaries.

“Heavy metals, aluminum, arsenic, lead... go into those waters, so it’s like throwing fertiliser into the water; the algae feed on that too and grow exponentially,” she said.

The massive spread of water lettuce paralysed El Salvador’s Lake Suchitlan local tourism and fishing trades, leaving boatmen without income and restaurants on the shore empty.

PHOTO: AFP

In an effort to eradicate the plant, five dredging barges are working to remove it.

So far, they have cleaned up about 6.3ha of the reservoir, equivalent to nine soccer fields, according to the state-owned Lempa River Hydroelectric Executive Commission.

But Ms Cortes warned that unless the root cause – the inflow of polluted water – was not addressed, the plants would continue to flourish. AFP

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