Miami Herald (Sunday)

Ride tide is drifting along the Florida coast: What to know about changing conditions

- BY RYAN BALLOGG rballogg@bradenton.com

A red tide bloom that arrived on Southwest Florida shores last fall continues to drift up and down the Gulf Coast.

But conditions improved for many local beaches this week as a more concentrat­ed area of the bloom moved into offshore waters near the mouth of Tampa Bay.

Reports of breathing irritation and dead fish stopped around most of Anna Maria Island this week, including in Bradenton Beach and Holmes Beach. An exception was the very north end of the island in Anna Maria, where a bloom concentrat­ion of red tide algae was detected at the Rod and Reel Pier on Monday.

Gulf beaches in Pinellas and Sarasota counties have also been enjoying a reprieve from the worst of the bloom, though very low to low levels of algae were detected near the shore in several spots this week, according to water samples collected by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservati­on Commission and partners.

For now, the worst of the bloom for the Tampa Bay region appears to be concentrat­ed near the mouth of the bay in waters offshore of Manatee and Pinellas.

Karenia brevis, the organism that causes red tide, was detected at bloom levels in three samples around the Sunshine Skyway Bridge, one west of Terra Ceia Preserve State Park and one west of Port Manatee.

The algae also popped back onto the radar farther south, where it was detected in offshore samples at medium strength off of Charlotte County, medium to high strength off of Collier and medium off Monroe.

In all, red tide algae was detected in 72 samples around Southwest Florida this week, up from 67 last week.

WHEN WILL RED TIDE END?

Red tide blooms are naturally occurring in the Gulf of Mexico; they can last for days, weeks or months depending on many environmen­tal factors that help or hinder their growth. Human nutrient pollution can make the blooms more intense when they approach shore, research has found.

Due to the many complex factors at play, it is difficult to predict whether the current red tide event will wind down soon, University of South Florida’s Ocean Circulatio­n Lab director Yonggang Liu said in an email. But one important factor could help make this season’s red tide less severe.

Scientists have pinpointed the Loop Current in the Gulf of Mexico as a major factor in the formation, length and intensity of red tide blooms.

According to Liu, the Loop Current is currently interactin­g with a “pressure point” near the Dry Tortugas which causes a strong upwelling current along much of the the west Florida shelf; the upwelling has a flushing effect on waters near shore and should help reduce the presence of brevis in the long term.

For now, Liu predicts a southward movement of the bloom in the next few days thanks to an incoming cold front.

The Loop Current’s effect, combined with further flushing from the cold front, could also

K.

 ?? D.A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com ?? Mom Laura Canchola, 28, second from right, lounges with her children, from left to right, Pedro Vasquez, 11, Jayden Vasquez, 9, Aubrey Vasquez, 5, and Mario Vasquez, 8, inside the family’s home in Homestead.
D.A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com Mom Laura Canchola, 28, second from right, lounges with her children, from left to right, Pedro Vasquez, 11, Jayden Vasquez, 9, Aubrey Vasquez, 5, and Mario Vasquez, 8, inside the family’s home in Homestead.
 ?? TIFFANY TOMPKINS ttompkins@bradenton.com ?? A red tide bloom that arrived on Southwest Florida shores last fall continues to drift up and down the Gulf Coast.
TIFFANY TOMPKINS ttompkins@bradenton.com A red tide bloom that arrived on Southwest Florida shores last fall continues to drift up and down the Gulf Coast.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States