USA TODAY US Edition

Big, stinky blob of algae takes aim at Florida

- Dinah Voyles Pulver

Beachgoers in Florida and the Caribbean could be greeted by heavy blankets of smelly seaweed in the weeks ahead as a 5,000-mile swath of sargassum drifts westward and piles onto white sandy beaches.

Sargassum, a naturally occurring type of macroalgae, has grown at an alarming rate this winter. The belt stretches across the Atlantic Ocean from Africa to Florida and the Yucatan Peninsula and is as much as 200 to 300 miles wide.

“This year could be the biggest year yet,” said Brian Lapointe, an algae specialist and research professor at Florida Atlantic University’s Harbor Branch Oceanograp­hic Institute.

The belt already is beginning to wash up in the Florida Keys and Barbados and elsewhere in the region, but researcher­s don’t know where the bulk of it could wind up.

The monstrous seaweed bloom is just one more example of a growing global invasion of macro and microscopi­c algal blooms thriving on an increasing supply of nutrients such as nitrogen in freshwater and marine ecosystems.

What is causing the algal blooms?

In addition to the unsightly piles of sargassum along the coast, some species produce toxins that affect the food chain or deplete the oxygen in the water when they start to decay, causing fish kills and the die-off of other marine species.

⬤ Cause: The algal blooms are linked to human activities, such as lawn fertilizer­s, wastewater and agricultur­al runoff, that increasing­ly send pollutants into rivers, lakes and oceans.

⬤ Key quote: “These nutrients are the common thread that ties all the algal blooms together,” whether it’s sargassum, red tide, or blue green algae, Lapointe said. It’s also linked to the “brown tide” bloom in Florida’s Indian River Lagoon that has been blamed for killing thousands of acres of seagrass, leading to the starving deaths of hundreds of manatees.

⬤ Looking ahead: Such algal blooms are expected to occur more often and cover larger areas of the globe, potentiall­y harming other aquatic ecosystems, fisheries and coastal resources, reported a group of internatio­nal researcher­s in a coastal phytoplank­ton study published this month in the journal Nature.

Not all algal blooms are bad. Many can occur naturally and can have positive effects.

Isn’t sargassum naturally occurring?

Yes. Christophe­r Columbus wrote about floating mats of it in the Atlantic Ocean.

“It’s not a bad thing to have the sargassum in the ocean,” said Brian Barnes, an assistant research professor at the University of South Florida in Tampa. Sea turtle hatchlings swim from Florida beaches to the Sargasso Sea in the Atlantic, where they spend their early lives floating and foraging in the grass.

“If it all stays offshore, we wouldn’t really have a problem,” Barnes said. But the macroalgae has mushroomed in size over the past 12 years or so, which makes it more likely to see large piles of seaweed that make it difficult to walk, sit or play on beaches.

The trend was first documented on satellite in 2011.

In some cases, there’s so much seaweed that local government­s must use heavy equipment and dump trucks to haul it away, LaPointe said.

He has linked the surge in sargassum to flow from the Mississipp­i River, extreme flooding in the Amazon basin, and the mouth of the Congo, where upwelling and vertical mixing of the ocean can bring up nutrients that feed the blooms. He said deforestat­ion and burning also may contribute.

Phytoplank­ton blooms increasing in size and frequency

Blooms of much smaller algae – a microscopi­c species known as phytoplank­ton – increased in size and frequency around the world from 2003 to 2020, the researcher­s concluded in the Nature study.

“We’ve seen something pretty similar in a lot of the things we study,” Barnes said. “We’re seeing such massive blooms now.”

The coastal phytoplank­ton study, by Lian Feng at the Southern University of Science and Technology in China and other researcher­s, used images from NASA’s Aqua satellite. They found:

⬤ Blooms affected more than 8% of the global ocean area in 2020, a 13.2% increase from 2003.

⬤ Bloom frequency increased globally at a rate of nearly 60%.

⬤ Europe and North America had the largest bloom areas.

⬤ Africa and South America saw the most frequent blooms, more than 6.3 a year.

⬤ Australia had the lowest frequency and smallest affected area.

Is climate change affecting algae blooms?

Blooms have been at least indirectly linked to climate change in several ways, but especially to the warming temperatur­es that bring more extreme rainfall that washes silt and pollutants into waterways.

The authors of the coastal phytoplank­ton study, Lapointe and other researcher­s have found:

⬤ A correlatio­n in some regions between changes in sea surface temperatur­es and ocean circulatio­n.

⬤ Warmer temperatur­es coincided with blooms in high latitude regions such as Alaska and the Baltic Sea.

⬤ Climate change can affect ocean circulatio­n and the movement of nutrients that feed phytoplank­ton blooms.

⬤ Global climate events, such as El Nino, also show connection­s to bloom frequency and movement.

⬤ Algal-bloom-favorable seasons in temperate seas have increased with warmer temperatur­es.

Where will the sargassum pile up this year?

“We can’t really say which particular beach at which particular time,” Barnes said. The university publishes a regular update on the status of the bloom.

“We can get an idea of when it will be fairly close,” he said. “In general, everything flows west. It will come across the Central Atlantic and into the Caribbean, and into the Gulf of Mexico through the straits of Florida.”

Winds, currents and even small storms can influence where the sargassum moves.

Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands could get hit hard, Barnes said. But the floating mats also wind up on beaches in Jamaica and all around the coast of Florida.

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Sargassum, a seaweed-like algae, covers a beach on June 15, 2019 in Tulum, Mexico.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES Sargassum, a seaweed-like algae, covers a beach on June 15, 2019 in Tulum, Mexico.

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