Red tide deniers now mostly agree that, while pollution may not cause red tide, it does make it worse.

Nearly two tons of dead fish on the beach.  Floridians should not put up with this.  Nor should they put up with manatees starving to death so a few can make money.

Nor seeing our springs flow less so one small company near High Springs can litter the countryside and river with empty plastic bottles.

Read the original article here at WUSFNews.

Comments by OSFR historian Jim Tatum.
jim.tatum@oursantaferiver.org
– A river is like a life: once taken,
it cannot be brought back © Jim Tatum


Red tide is causing fish kills along Pinellas beaches

 

 

Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
Red Tide found off Cayo Costa, near Fort Myers, in November

But winds from the north expected during a major cold front coming through on Thursday should push the red tide offshore or back to the south, away from Pinellas beaches.

Workers continue to scoop dead fish from beaches in southern Pinellas County after the latest outbreak of red tide. But we may see some relief when a cold front passes through later this week.

More than 1,500 pounds of dead fish were shoveled off Pass-a-Grille Beach since last weekend. The culprit is a bloom of red tide that has drifted north from the Fort Myers area since Hurricane Ian flooded inland parts of the state.

Kate Hubbard is director of red tide research for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

“The bloom in particular is impacting beaches in the southern part of Pinellas County,” she said. “So what we have right now is a fairly localized patch. It does extend further south, we’ve seen it move up north over time. We’re continuing to track it.”

Hubbard says it’s hard to predict whether the bloom will get worse. But she expects winds from the north anticipated during a major cold front coming through on Thursday, should push the red tide offshore or back to the south, away from Pinellas beaches.

The latest outbreak of red tide affecting southern Pinellas County beaches can be traced back in part to Hurricane Ian.

There were no reports of fish kills until Ian struck southwest Florida. The storm flooded areas far inland, and pollution and nutrients washed into the Gulf when it receded, feeding offshore algae blooms.

“This year, the hard part was Ian passing through. It left a lot of destruction,” Hubbard said. “And so I think it’s going to take a while before we fully understand the impact of that on the ecosystem at large and taking it one step further, to thinking about what that might have done for algae and red tide….”

Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
Researchers at the state Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission take samples of red tide

Published by Friends & Other Advocates

Friends & Other Advocates - Part of Our mission here at Our Santa Fe River is to inform the public about issues pertaining to the water quality and quantity of the Santa Fe River. We do that in many ways including posting articles here on Our website. To that end, we use many articles from many different sources. So we send out a huge THANK YOU to all of those friends and other advocates who give their time and energy by writing about what matters most to us, protecting Our Santa Fe River and letting us republish those items here on our website.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Exit mobile version
Skip to content