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United States Science

Florida's Gulf Coast Battles Deadly And Smelly Red Tide (npr.org) 123

Greg Allen, writing for NPR: Florida this week declared a state of emergency because of a slow-moving natural disaster -- red tide. Red tide is toxic algae that have persisted off Florida's Gulf Coast for nearly a year. In recent weeks, the algae bloom has worsened, killing fish, turtles and dolphins and discouraging tourism on some of the state's most beautiful beaches.

Scores of dead fish were visible on the shore of Manatee Beach on a recent morning. There was a smell from the fish, but something more -- an acrid smell that can make you cough. Mary Vanswol, who was at the beach with her husband, James, said, "Uh, the smell is terrible. And it's affecting my lungs. I'm coughing, not so much him, but I am. It's just sad to see all the dead fish." The Vanswols live nearby and usually go swimming. But not today. After getting a look at the dead fish and the murky, slightly reddish-hued water, Mary Vanswols said they were leaving. "I wouldn't even walk along the edge of it. I just don't think it's safe," she said.
Robert Weisberg, an oceanographer at the University of South Florida whose lab produces seasonal and short term forecasts of red tide, told Gizmodo a confluence of ocean circulation and environmental factors are likely responsible for initiating the bloom. Others experts are pointing to the potential role of human-driven nutrient pollution in helping to maintain it.
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Florida's Gulf Coast Battles Deadly And Smelly Red Tide

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  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Wednesday August 15, 2018 @12:09PM (#57131206)
    they'll get plenty of federal funding. California, OTOH, better hope those wild fires burn themselves out.
    • by mspohr ( 589790 ) on Wednesday August 15, 2018 @12:15PM (#57131260)

      Part of the problem is that their idiot governor, Rick Scott (R), deleted funding for control of red tide. He doesn't believe in environmental regulations or climate change so didn't think it was necessary to inconvenience the sugar plantations by putting controls on their pollution.

      • your comment and the main post imply the assumption that red tide is man made and unnatural.
        nature by itself can be "toxic", kill "fish, turtles and dolphins", "discourage tourism on some of the state's most beautiful beaches", can have an "acrid smell that can make you cough", prevent "usual swimming", etc etc
        it is impossible to be a true nature lover and not "look at the dead fish and the murky, slightly reddish-hued water" and other such things. only people living in an artificial bubble containing a ma

        • by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Wednesday August 15, 2018 @12:39PM (#57131456)
          Red tide is natural. It's also increased by runoff containing manmade fertilizers into the ocean. The "control" part is about preventing unneeded runoff, not mucking with nature.
          • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

            Yes well than real solution would be to let the mangroves etc move back it; If you get rid of the coastal golf courses, lawns, and artificial sandy beaches there will be no man-made fertilizers to deployed to run anywhere. As per usual this is just one typically left leaning group saying "your environmentally destructive practices are unacceptable but mine are perfectly alright because my intentions and feelings..and by the way you can't build that wind turbine in view of my house."

             

            • If you get rid of the coastal golf courses,“

              Sssssss! Lèse-Majesté!

            • Yep, golf courses and lawns, as well as fertilizer and herbicide/pesticide use on them, should be regulated with a heavy hand. Maybe not get rid of existing ones, but having a less-than-perfect turf isn't the end of the world.
            • by hawkfish ( 8978 )

              Yes well than real solution would be to let the mangroves etc move back it; If you get rid of the coastal golf courses, lawns, and artificial sandy beaches there will be no man-made fertilizers to deployed to run anywhere. As per usual this is just one typically left leaning group saying "your environmentally destructive practices are unacceptable but mine are perfectly alright because my intentions and feelings..and by the way you can't build that wind turbine in view of my house."

              I'm a lefty who doesn't play golf, you insensitive clod.

            • I used to spend every winter in Florida for work, and I often stayed to burn up my vacation (use it or lose it) and go camping.

              Since I spent most of my time in the keys and on the Atlantic side of the state for work, I tried to spend time on the gulf side to check out. There was always a little bit of foul smell, and yuck, but one year it was particularly bad.

              I ended up camping in the mangroves as it was the only acceptable place to be because of the stench and who knows what nasties that were washing up o

        • by mspohr ( 589790 ) on Wednesday August 15, 2018 @12:45PM (#57131500)

          If you bother to read TFA (the second one, which may be a bit too much to ask), you'll see that human pollution and climate change are causing this red tide to be much worse than the "natural" events of the past.

      • er no

        these blooms are natural and happen off coasts all over the world, for longer than man has been making tools. they've been going on including around florida for longer than the USA has existed.

        imagining they can be "controlled" is just laughable.

        are you going to blame the Republicans for anthrax in deer poop?

        • by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Wednesday August 15, 2018 @12:45PM (#57131496)
          True. It's also true that dumping fertilizer runoff into the ocean increases their size and duration. The issue here isn't the red tide per se -- it's how long it has lasted.
          • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

            Yeah but that's not what's happening. Rather farmers put fertilizer out, then get hit by sudden runs of storms from either coast. Which is what happens in a lot of cases, hell we just finished having a similar problem way way way north up here in Ontario. Weather forecasts have 0% of rain for literal days, farmers go out and spray fertilizer, and surprise! Next 4 days of nothing but rain off and on.

            Poor weather forecasting has a much bigger impact on fertilizer runoff then farmers "dumping" run off, on t

        • Perhaps not republicans, but you could certainly blame humans! That was introduced into the soil by cattle.
        • by mspohr ( 589790 )

          https://theconversation.com/wh... [theconversation.com]

          One key aspect of rehabilitating polluted lakes, rivers and estuaries is knowing whether actions are having a positive effect. This requires long-term environmental monitoring programs, which unfortunately have been scaled back in Florida and many other states due to budget cuts.

      • You mean that annual event [myfwc.com] called red tide?
        • Did you read your own link?

          If the bloom moves inshore, nutrient runoff from land may promote bloom expansion. A bloom can linger in coastal areas for days, weeks or even months.

          • It will all be fixed when rising ocean levels (which of course are not happening) drown Florida.

    • If only [wildfiretoday.com] the State of California [washingtonpost.com] didn't consistently [sierrastar.com] slash it's forest-fire fighting budget. But it's more important to build a 160 kph train from Bakersfield to Modesto, so...
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday August 15, 2018 @12:10PM (#57131220)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      it is not to be confused with The Red Bloom: a scourge which plagues Florida in the form of an overweight bald methamphetamine addict in a cape fashioned from a bath rug who steals urinal mints from hotel bathrooms and once consumed nearly ten kilos of frosting at a pastry factory in Tallahassee before being subdued by a combination of police dogs, tazer, and coronary artery disease.

      I'm not familiar with that subspecies of Homo floridensis. Does it have a specific range? It must be a sight to see in the wild, although it's probably best to avoid observation during it's mating season.

      • "I'm not familiar with that subspecies of Homo floridensis. Does it have a specific range? It must be a sight to see in the wild, "

        They migrate there, usually in their seventies. They drive big Cars, Cadillacs and they feed very early in the evening, eating stuff called 'early bird special' specially prepared for them by the local population.
        You can approach them very carefully, but don't spook them with political talk or they get apoplectic.

    • it is not to be confused with The Red Bloom: a scourge which plagues Florida in the form of an overweight bald methamphetamine addict in a cape fashioned from a bath rug who steals urinal mints from hotel bathrooms and once consumed nearly ten kilos of frosting at a pastry factory in Tallahassee

      But now he owns Mar-a-Lago, so bite it, lib.

  • You know what comes after a red tide? A red storm!

    The Russians are coming!

  • uh, these red blooms are a recurring thing

    you'll find they happened in 2014, 2012, 2007, 2005.... 17th century...

    so change your underwear and calm down, you alarmist tards

    • This is a worse one than usual; the locals were blaming allowing water from Lake Okeechobee to be diverted down the Caloosahatchee to prevent flooding the sugar plantations when I was visiting. I don't know if this has been scientifically confirmed, but it would make sense that it would increase the severity of an algae bloom.
      • no, these have been going on since algae has existed

        imagining "x or y might increase the severity" without a shred of proof is just scare mongering.

        seriously, these are natural. they've been going on since algae existed...for *billions* of years!

        • by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Wednesday August 15, 2018 @12:47PM (#57131504)
          Algae are plants. Fertilizer feeds plants. Allowing runoff from a lake heavily contaminated with fertilizer runoff to be dumped into the ocean has a predictable result. Science, baby!
        • by Gilgaron ( 575091 ) on Wednesday August 15, 2018 @12:48PM (#57131522)
          It isn't without a shred of proof, it is a documented phenomena that fertilizer runoff worsens algae blooms. It'd be impossible for it not to occur, really... the microbes are going to eat what you give 'em. The only thing at issue is whether it exacerbated this bloom, which while I believe the evidence is currently pointed to "yes" is a harder question to answer definitively, given that they occur naturally and there were potentially other affects that may have contributed more to how bad this bloom is.
          • a scientist says "signs point to yes" what that means in colloquial speech is "Hell yes". Scientists don't like speaking in definites, but voters hate it when you sound unsure. They think you're lying to them.
            • Yes, they also hate it when people change opinions based on new evidence ('flip floppers'), whereas to scientists that's 'not being an asshole'
        • no, these have been going on since algae has existed

          imagining "x or y might increase the severity" without a shred of proof is just scare mongering.

          seriously, these are natural. they've been going on since algae existed...for *billions* of years!

          Read this news [stanford.edu]. Want more? Here [researchgate.net] is another one for you. When you said "without a shred of proof," it demonstrates that you are ignorant because there are plenty of "shred of proof" but you aren't trying to even look for one.

          • hey genius, none of that speaks of blooms off Florida

            first link is of bloom near mexico

            2nd feature is a bunch of circles off the coast of everywhere... yes those blooms have been going on off the coast of everywhere for all time of life on post-oxygenated earth

            thanks for random google spew

            • Hey genius, you are the one that don't understand the issue. The problem is NOT about red tide occurrence, but it is the effect being expanded. Those links are related to explanation why, and that is related to the issue. Again, not about red tide occurrence as you attempt to mislead the whole issue.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I have lived here (on the east coast of Florida, but with a similar problem) for all my 56 years. While we occasionally have algae blooms they're becoming more frequent, arrive earlier, and last longer. To top it off the last few years our algae blooms have been found to be toxic. I've fished and dived my entire life here in Martin County and it is getting worse each year.
      The Big lake Okeechobee drains west through the Caloosahatchee canal/river to the Gulf of Mexico, and east through the St. Lucie canal/ri

    • by eriks ( 31863 )

      That's only partly true. The last "red tide" of this scale happened from 2004 to 2006. However, the number of dead animals on the beaches seems to be unprecedented this time, probably because the "red tide" is accompanied by a blue-green algae bloom, which is caused by a different organism, although has the same proximate cause: too much for the algae/bacteria to eat. The governor has declared a state of emergency, so even he's taking it seriously (now). Probably at least partly because of the potential

      • by gtall ( 79522 )

        You mean the governor is taking his election seriously, he wants to be a senator so he can help do to the country what he's done to Florida and its coastal waters.

    • Yes, "Red Tides" are a known recurring natural phenomena.

      Yet, this "alarmist" notice is relatively warranted as the occurrence and persistence is far, far greater than has ever been recorded.
      And, the toxicity of this particular strain is higher than usual.

      Seems prudent to me for any intelligent species to keep both an eye on this and perhaps determine the causes and remedies.

      Who's the "tard" here?
  • Trump has insisted that a Red Tide is coming. The Florida GOP has now gotten behind their leader to make it happen by putting in place GOP environmental policies that make will make Red Tides a permanent fixture of Florida coastlines for years to come. .

  • Let us offer then our hopes and prayers then that the Blue Wave will very soon do away with the Red Tide.

  • Let your conservative, christian friends help you out.
  • Has anyone checked for Solar plants being used to destroy toxic waste but are actually dumping it into an underground river?
  • by hyades1 ( 1149581 ) <hyades1@hotmail.com> on Wednesday August 15, 2018 @01:30PM (#57131884)

    The GOP jokes just write themselves.

  • About 80 percent of Florida will be below sea level by 2050.

  • Dammit, Trump supporters, stop bathing in the ocean!
  • Maybe they should see about relocating their state farther from Alabama.

  • In our sweatshop cubicle farm it is a smelly "Red Tidal Wave"
  • Climate change alarmists have done much disservice to the honorable cause of environmentalism.

    When you shout at the top of your lungs, all day every day, "Global warming! Global cooling! Carbon! Ocean levels will rise by ten meters in a decade! The sky is falling! Reeeeeeeeeeeee!" - people start to think you're an unhinged crank.

    Whereas when you say, "Hey, let's not dump industrial chemicals into the river, that might have really bad consequences" - pretty much everyone agrees.

Solutions are obvious if one only has the optical power to observe them over the horizon. -- K.A. Arsdall

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