Ohio's agricultural interests are recovering from a black eye caused by toxic algae this summer. When toxic algae forced Toledo to shut off its water supply in August to half million customers Ohio farm interests were in the crosshairs. 70 percent of the land in Northwest Ohio counties is used for crop and livestock production and run-off from fields was a major cause of the algae bloom. Now farm groups, academia, and environmental agencies say they'll spend millions of dollars to keep commercial fertilizer and manure nutrients on the field and out Northwest Ohio streams that feed western Lake Erie. Ohio Director of Agriculture David Daniels says there's no quick fix to preventing toxic algae blooms in Lake Erie. At the Farm Science Review in London, Daniels says farmers in western Ohio are now taking steps to prevent run-off of fertilizers and manure into waterways. Ohio Farm Bureau policy analyst, Larry Antosch says though it will take years to reduce the threat of field run-off into streams and rivers and lakes.