Dayton Daily News

Tests show waves are sick, in totally the wrong way

- By Wayne Parry

‘It’s not a question of if you’re going to get sick, it’s when. There have been ear infections, eye infections, respirator­y infections, intestinal problems.’ Richard Lee, a surfer and executive director of the Surfers Environmen­tal Alliance, which is funding a $30,000 yearlong study in New Jersey

Most LONG BRANCH, N.J. — surfers know it’s best to avoid surfing near pipes that dump storm water into the ocean soon after a storm, due to the increased chance of getting sick from bacteria that enter the surf.

Many do it anyway because the periods just after storms often bring bigger waves, prompting them to hold their nose and brave the so-called “chocolate tube” or the “root beer float.”

Although the relationsh­ip between heavy rain, outfall pipes and water-borne bacteria has been well establishe­d, it continues to be studied around the country and the world.

One such study is underway at New Jersey’s Monmouth University, where researcher­s are evaluating water quality at popular surfing beaches along the Jersey shore with an eye toward documentin­g higher levels of harmful, illness-causing bacteria in the water after storms.

The idea is to give surfers and others who use the water more informatio­n to make more informed decisions about when to surf and what might be in the water around them.

“It’s not a question of if you’re going to get sick, it’s when,” said Richard Lee, a surfer and executive director of the Surfers Environmen­tal Alliance, which is funding the $30,000 yearlong study in New Jersey. “There have been ear infections, eye infections, respirator­y infections, intestinal problems.

“The water is murkier; sometimes we call it the ‘root beer float,’” he said. “You get this orange-brown float on the surface.”

A 2010 study by the Surfrider Foundation found surfers are more likely to get sick from being in the water than other beachgoers. This is partly because they are in the water more frequently and for longer periods, and ingest 10 times more water than swimmers, the survey found.

A team of student and university staff researcher­s is taking water quality samples before and after each rainfall this year.

“When we get big storms, the stuff that’s getting into the water is what’s making us sick,” said Jason Adolf, a marine science professor at Monmouth. Most of the bacteria come from pet waste in streets that gets washed down drains and out into the ocean, but occasional­ly sewer systems overflow into storm drain systems, as well, adding human bacteria to the mix.

New Jersey authoritie­s also do their own beach water quality testing along the shore, but mostly during summer months. The Monmouth testing will continue through fall and winter, when storms can be more numerous and surfers are still in the water. Jeff Weisburg, a specialist professor who teaches about microbiolo­gy, health and disease, said fall hurricanes usually produce the best waves of the year on the East Coast.

While the state testing is used to issue swimming advisories and if necessary, to temporaril­y close beaches when bacteria levels are high, the Monmouth research is aimed more at documentin­g local conditions at particular beaches throughout the year.

Larry Hajna, a spokesman for the New Jersey Department of Environmen­tal Protection, said the state has no plans to incorporat­e the Monmouth research into its own beach monitoring program, and noted “the connection­s between heavy rainfall, storm water pipe discharges and temporary increases in bacterial levels are well documented.”

Similar work has been going on for years wherever surfers take to the water. High school students in Santa Monica, California, have tested the waters at popular surfing beaches there. Health department­s in Los Angeles and San Diego monitor water quality near outfall sources.

And in the U.K., a group called Surfers Against Sewage collected evidence of raw sewage entering waterways and pushed for stricter laws to prevent it. It sent out over 244,000 real-time text alerts about water quality during the 2016 bathing season.

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