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31 million tons of seaweed ready to stink up Florida's beaches

31 million tons of seaweed ready to stink up Florida's beaches

Yahoo20-05-2025
A smelly, sometimes toxic 'killer belt of seaweed' might put a damper on Floridians' Memorial Day weekend plans. Sargassum is back just in time for the unofficial start of summer and this year's influx of the brown algae would be record breaking at 31 million tons.
Sargassum is a genus of large brown seaweed. As a seaweed, it is also a type of algae. It floats along the ocean in island-like masses and does not attach to the seafloor the way that kelp does.
According to NOAA, this brown algae is abundant in the world's oceans. It has many leafy appendages, branches, and its signature berry-like structures. These round 'berries' are actually gas-filled structures called pneumatocysts. They are primarily filled with oxygen and add buoyancy to the plant structure and allow it to float on the surface of the water, similar to a life jacket.
Importantly, Sargassum provides food and a floating habitat for several marine species including various fishes, sea turtles, marine birds, crabs, and shrimp. Some animals, like the sargassum fish will spend their whole lives around Sargassum's gas-filled floats and the seaweed is a nursery area for some commercially important fishes, including mahi mahi, jacks, and amberjacks.
When Sargassum washes up on shore, it begins to rot. That rotting triggers the production of hydrogen sulfide gas, which smells like rotten eggs.
These odors themselves are not harmful to humans when inhaled in well ventilated areas like the beach. But the gases can accumulate enough to cause harm if they are breathed in within enclosed spaces.
'Hydrogen sulfide can irritate the eyes, nose, and throat,' writes Florida's Department of Health in St. John's County. 'If you have asthma or other breathing illnesses, you will be more sensitive to hydrogen sulfide. You may have trouble breathing after you inhale it.'
Coming into contact with the jellyfish or other stinging organisms embedded in the rotting seaweed can cause rashes on the skin. Any workers for volunteers collecting and transporting the seaweed should wear gloves, boots, and gas-filter half masks for protection.
[ Related: A stinky, 5,000-mile-long wad of seaweed is about to gunk up Florida's beaches. ]
In Florida and the Caribbean, Sargassum season runs from April to August, with June and July as the peak months for setting in along the shoreline. However, the blobs have been spotted along shorelines since March this year. The bloom has already broken its own size record set in June 2022 by 40 percent–and is still growing. The annual bloom now stretches over 5,500 miles of ocean between Africa and the Caribbean and weighs an estimated 31 million tons.
'Sargassum goes from being a very beneficial resource of the North Atlantic to becoming what we refer to as … a harmful algal bloom, when it comes ashore in excessive biomass,' Brian LaPointe, a research professor at Florida Atlantic University's Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute, told CNN. 'What we have seen since 2011 are excessive inundation events all around the Caribbean region, the Gulf, as well as the South Florida region.'
Increasing ocean temperatures due to climate change is one of the reasons for such a large bloom. The Atlantic and waters around Florida have seen record-breaking high temperatures in recent years, creating ideal conditions for the seaweed to thrive. The excess nitrogen in the water from the burning of fossil fuels or dust from the Sahara is believed to be one of the forces behind this supercharged bloom.
Scientists can use satellites to track the seaweed and issue warnings if needed. The CariCOOS Sargassum map shows that the bulk of the bloom is currently east of Puerto Rico, but it has already been spotted along Florida's Atlantic coast.
NOAA encourages anyone who encounters Sargassum on the beach to report it with this form.
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Deadly Legionnaires' disease outbreak was ‘completely preventable,' lawyer contends — putting NYC on lawsuit notice
Deadly Legionnaires' disease outbreak was ‘completely preventable,' lawyer contends — putting NYC on lawsuit notice

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Deadly Legionnaires' disease outbreak was ‘completely preventable,' lawyer contends — putting NYC on lawsuit notice

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Harlem Hospital's cooling towers spread Legionnaires' disease in deadly NYC outbreak, Rev. Al Sharpton charges — as locals blame city-owned buildings
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Cooling towers at Harlem Hospital filled with rainwater after several large July storms, but was left untreated — permitting the bacteria to spread among workers at the site, according to statement from Sharpton and Crump. The lawsuit, while still-murky, dovetails with growing suspicions that the city dropped the ball on inspections of cooling towers at its buildings — including Harlem Hospital — and others that helped incubate the insidious bacteria that causes Legionnaires' disease. Four of 12 cooling towers that tested positive for Legionella bacteria were on city- or government-owned buildings. Two of those buildings — Harlem Hospital and the city Department of Health's Central Harlem Sexual Health Clinic — are on the same stretch of West 137th Street, a quiet residential neighborhood. Building owners by state law and city health code are required to test for the disease-causing bacteria Legionella every 90 days to avoid outbreaks. 5 The outbreak has led to 5 people being killed, with over 100 more affected by the disease. Google Earth City health department scientists also separately conduct inspections, usually every year, on cooling towers to make sure they're adequately disinfected and building owners are regularly testing for Legionella. A Post analysis of city records showed the Central Harlem Sexual Health Clinic had racked up 18 violations during cooling tower inspections starting in 2017. No city record showed whether the clinic's cooling tower had been tested for Legionella. A DOH spokesperson said a new tower had been installed on the building in June. 5 In a statement, Shaprton and civil rights attorney Ben Crump blame the hospital for failing to clean up the towers that filled up during the summer storms. 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Jory Lange — an attorney representing 44 Legionnaires' patients in the current outbreak, including Mckeithan and one who died — already has a pending lawsuit against the city's Health + Hospitals alleging a cooling tower at Harlem Hospital caused a 2021 outbreak. 5 4 out of the 12 cooling towers tested positive for the bacteria of the disease, and they were city- or government-owned properties. Rob Jejenich / NY Post Design He called it 'very disturbing' that a third of the cooling towers in the recent outbreak were government-owned. 'Who knows how long the cooling towers were positive?' he said. Attorney Scott A. Harford, who is co-counsel in the pending suit and repped 15 plaintiffs sickened during a 2018 outbreak in Washington Heights' Sugar Hill, said the Legionella bacteria will explode in 'no time,' if building owners don't have a water management plan. 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New Jersey health officials investigate possible malaria case in person who didn't travel internationally
New Jersey health officials investigate possible malaria case in person who didn't travel internationally

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New Jersey health officials investigate possible malaria case in person who didn't travel internationally

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