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Alumni Gazette

MICHAEL PARSONS 鈥90 AND MICHAEL SAVARESE 鈥81, 鈥84 (MS)Red Tide: A Looming 鈥楶lanetary Problem鈥 What does a persistent bloom of algae indicate about the health of the planet? By Lindsey Valich
red tideDEADLY DUST: The cycles of algae blooms known as red tides that are plaguing the Gulf of Mexico have their origins half a world away, rising out of the Sahara in Africa. While the blooms have existed for millennia, the cycles have been happening with more frequency and intensity, say Rochester alumni who study red tides and their impact.

While the harmful algae known as red tide have historically been common in warm waters like those of the Gulf of Mexico, the troublesome blooms are no longer seasonal. The algae kill marine animals and make life miserable for beachgoers.

A particularly robust cycle that began last fall prompted Florida Governor Rick Scott to declare a state of emergency this past summer for seven counties in southern Florida.

Michael Parsons 鈥90 and Michael Savarese 鈥81, 鈥84 (MS) are leading an effort to study red tide and determine what can be done to mitigate its effects. As researchers at Florida Gulf Coast University, they analyze the blooms and environmental changes in coastal settings, particularly in response to human development, sea-level rise, and global warming.

鈥淩egions of harmful algal blooms across the globe have increased in size, number and frequency,鈥 Savarese says. 鈥淭his isn鈥檛 just a Florida problem or a Gulf of Mexico problem, this is a planetary problem.鈥

What is red tide?

When algae grow out of control and produce toxins harmful to humans and wildlife ecosystems, they are called harmful algal blooms (HABs). Red tide is just one type of HAB, common in the Gulf of Mexico and characterized by explosions of single-celled algae called dinoflagellates. Each cell is about the size of a grain of salt, but when concentrations become greater than 100,000 cells per liter of water, the harmful algae can severely lower oxygen levels and give water a reddish or brownish color.

What are the effects on humans?

Red tide is harmful to humans if ingested, either by eating tainted shellfish鈥攚hich can cause nerve and respiratory damage鈥攐r breathing in the neurotoxin brevetoxin, which the algae produce. Breathing the toxin can cause people to sneeze or cough, and red tide may exacerbate symptoms of asthma or other pre-existing respiratory ailments. Most of the respiratory irritations are easily fixed, though: 鈥淵ou just leave the beach,鈥 Parsons says. 鈥淏ut when you leave the beach, you鈥檙e disrupting the tourism economy.鈥

Florida is hit especially hard economically by red tide because of the state鈥檚 reliance on tourism. Fort Myers Beach, for example, announced this year that the area has been losing $2.6 million per day because of red tide, Parsons says. 鈥淭he economic impacts are huge.鈥

What causes red tide?

Poor water quality does not directly lead to red tide algal blooms, Parsons says. 鈥淓veryone assumes the cause of red tide is agricultural nutrients coming off the landscape, but it鈥檚 not that simple. Red tides have existed for millennia.鈥

Poor water quality can exacerbate the problem, but red tide algal blooms actually form far offshore, triggered by a natural cycle. Iron-rich dust from the Sahara scatters into the Atlantic Ocean and fertilizes the water, creating ideal conditions for dinoflagellates to thrive. The Florida coast is fairly shallow until about 100 to 200 miles out, where the gulf drops into extremely deep water. When those deep waters rise up toward the surface, they can bring in new nutrients that further feed the red tide.

Why was red tide so bad this year?

While scientists are still studying the connection between climate change and red tide, there 鈥渋s clearly some sort of relationship,鈥 Savarese says. 鈥淔or algae to bloom and thrive, warmer waters are important. The current Gulf of Mexico temperatures are unprecedented in recent history.鈥

Warmer waters are just one of a 鈥減erfect storm鈥 of factors contributing to the intensity of the current red tide, Parsons says. Other factors include more persistent winds blowing offshore blooms inland and 鈥渓egacy鈥 nutrients鈥攍itter, fertilizers, and wastewater runoff鈥攆rom Hurricane Irma, which hit Florida in September 2017.

Red tide used to be more common in the winter, but even that鈥檚 changing: the current red tide has been a continuous presence in Florida since October 2017. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know when red tide season is anymore, and the reason I don鈥檛 know is scary: there seem to be red tides year-round now,鈥 Savarese says.

With this bleak picture, is there any hope that the red tide may go away any time soon?

Yes, surmises Parsons. 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to predict, but we are seeing the system change. Nutrients are moving into different pathways, which should basically starve the red tide. But things could change back at any time.鈥