March 14, 2023

"Spanning thousands of miles... the blob — a tangled, buoyant, mass of a type of seaweed called sargassum — is expected to come ashore in Florida..."

"... and elsewhere along the Gulf of Mexico.... [I]t will then begin to rot, emitting toxic fumes and fouling the region’s beaches over the busiest summer months....While floating sargassum can benefit marine animals by providing shade and shelter, the problems begin once it comes ashore. As the sargassum begins to die, it degrades the water quality and pollutes beaches, scientists say. It can also choke vital mangrove habitats and suck oxygen out of the water. The decaying algae also releases hydrogen sulfide, a colorless gas that smells like rotten eggs, and can cause respiratory problems in humans.... The most immediate threat, however, is to tourism."

29 comments:

gilbar said...

the Sargasso sea
WHY haven't we heard about this, before? I mean.. Other than ALL the times in the last 100 years we Were told

Old and slow said...

Let me guess, the top rated comment mentions both Trump and Desantis.

Readering said...

So I'm thinking we contract with the Chinese to build a massive fleet of balloons, which we affix to the seaweed and let it drift slowly into the Atlantic Ocean.

Wince said...

Trump’s, err, DeSantis’ fault.

Owen said...

I’m sure the DeSantisophobes are thrilled with this news.

Can we get any time trends here? How often and how badly does this scourge appear? Is this case worse than, say, the state of things 25 and 50 years ago?

Science. It’s hard!

Mason G said...

"As the sargassum begins to die, it degrades the water quality and pollutes beaches, scientists say."

If it causes pollution, perhaps a law should be passed to make it illegal for the seaweed to grow? Just a thought...

On the plus side, it's good to hear that human beings aren't to blame for all the pollution going on on the planet. I can see an effort has nonetheless been made to connect this to mankind...

"Fossil fuel emissions and the burning of biomass — such as trees after deforestation — also produce nutrients, he added, that could be helping the sargassum to grow."

but this raises other issues. Ignoring for the moment the weasel words "could be", if fossil fuel emissions truly do produce nutrients that enable the seaweed to grow, wouldn't those emissions also help useful plant life (such as food crops) to prosper? Regarding burning biomass- deliberate deforestation isn't the only burning going on. There is also the inadvertent deforestation due to wildfires caused by government mismanagement of forested lands, which might cause the skeptical reader to wonder- "Is the government thinking about trying to manage yet another problem when they've not yet demonstrated they could deal with the last one"?

Coop said...

It is pretty awesome when seen from sea level well offshore. Growing up, I spent my summers fishing deep sea billfish tournaments up and down the Texas coast. That golden weed is awesome and brutal. We’d fish around incredibly massive mats of the stuff that stretched well to the horizon and catch lots of fish. But it also meant fouling the fishing lines all the time, and I was the one that got to reel the lures in, clear the hooks and reset everything. But dang would that stuff hold some fish!

Back on the beach the stuff would wash ashore in huge leafy waves. Generally, county maintenance would bulldoze it into piles and then have it hauled off. But it’d still get pretty darned stinky and you had to be really careful stepping through it on the beach as Portuguese Men of War would often be tangled up in it and even dead, their tentacles hold some venom.

Good times! Hope it doesn’t screw up the mangroves in Florida. Can’t really bulldoze there…

WK said...

I recall that “The Lost Continent” seemed pretty scary when I was about 8 years old. The people using balloons to enable them to walk on the seaweed was quite innovative.

JZ said...

I think this is commonly referred to as Red Tide by Floridians. I’ve smelled it in-land around Cocoa and the inter coastal rivers.

Mark said...

Damn woke seaweed coming to ruin DeSantis' day.

madAsHell said...

"I need a new crisis."

gspencer said...

From the list of terrible things that will happen to America I thought the story was about the illegals.

chickelit said...

I am reminded of the 1968 Hammer film, “The Lost Continent” which was set in the Sargasso Sea” and which featured vagina dentata monsters.

The Vault Dweller said...

Is this a bigger problem or a smaller problem than the BP Oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico?

chickelit said...

Sargassum is just stored solar energy. Burning it would be carbon neutral. why isnt this happening?

Owen said...

This stuff must be due to climate change, entirely unrelated to the Sargasso Sea. Which IIRC was so named about 400 years ago.

chickelit said...

“When the still sea conspires an armor
And her sullen and aborted currents
Breed tiny monsters
True sailing is dead!

Awkward instant
And the first animal is jettisoned
Legs furiously pumping
Their stiff green gallop
And heads bob up
Poise
Delicate
Pause
Consent
In mute nostril agony
Carefully refined
And sealed over”

J. Morrison

walter said...

Calling it a blob is so disrespectful. It should get a proper name like Giuseppe or Marge.

typingtalker said...

Organic? Yes.
Natural? Yes.
Annual? Yes.
News? As newsworthy as the sun rising.

Perhaps they can sell boat tours ... kind of like Autumn bus tours in New England.

Wilbur said...

The New York Times believes the summer months are Florida's "busiest months".

Pete said...

We're long time vacationers in this area and we visited three years ago during a red tide. Pestered locals about it and they seemed unconcerned - this kind of thing happens all the time and they're used to it. The next two years were fine. Now, after the hurricane, another red tide. Pshaw. We'll be fine. Nature finds a way.

Leland said...

"immediate", I don't think that word means what they think it means.

Menahem Globus said...

The manatees have been starving the last few years. This is a good thing.

tommyesq said...

I think this is commonly referred to as Red Tide by Floridians.

Red tide is something different, it is a red algae bloom that creates toxins - kills fish, irritates the throat and eyes, stuff like that, but no significant plant life washing up.

Expat(ish) said...

@Pete - I live in SWF and well recall that red tide.

Fun fact, red tide down here mostly comes from runoff from Lake O. A famous Corp of Engineers construction that we (FL) are trying to mediate to the tune of $1B/year.

-XC

MadisonMan said...

"scientists say"
Well all right then. Must be true.

Mike (MJB Wolf) said...

It’s a natural process. Let it be.

bagoh20 said...

American media has a minimum of 1 crisis per day, but no maximum, except you have to save at least one for tomorrow. Imagine a day without crisis, a week, a month. They rarely materialize, so you might even make it a year.

Rollo said...

It must be from that Benefiber tanker that sank.