Seaweed Swath Twice the Size of the US Threatens Spring and Summer Tourism

2 min


170
109 shares, 170 points

With the compounding effects of climate change and harmful human activities, it’s a problem that’s been worsening by the year—the colossal algae blooms growing over the surface of the Atlantic Ocean, which annually affects tourism on North and Central American coasts.

After growing into gargantuan floating globs, a seaweed variety known as sargassum (a catch-all term that actually refers to many species of brown algae), eventually washes up on beaches in popular travel destinations, from Florida beaches to Caribbean coastlines and all through the Gulf of Mexico.

And, this season’s enormous algae mass that’s formed in Atlantic waters over the past few months could be the largest one ever, Dr. Brian Lapointe, a researcher at Florida Atlantic University’s Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute, told CNN. That’s right, 2023’s gargantuan seaweed glob stretches across 5,000 miles, and could collectively cover the entire United States twice over.

Lapointe explained that this year’s sargassum bloom began forming early, and then doubled in size between December and January. The floating expanse, “was larger in January than it has ever been since this new region of sargassum growth began in 2011,” Lapointe told the outlet. “This is an entirely new oceanographic phenomenon that is creating such a problem—really a catastrophic problem—for tourism in the Caribbean region, where it piles up on beaches up to 5 or 6 feet deep,” he said.

Environmental Impacts

Besides being an incredible eyesore, the Brobdingnagian blobs that overrun these beaches have plenty of other negative impacts on popular coastal tourist areas. Not to mention the detriments imposed on marine life after they make landfall, disrupting delicate ecosystems, and choking natural habitats and breeding grounds.

Sargassum seaweed on the beach in Mexico. (photo via Peter Marik / iStock / Getty Images Plus)

Not only do the fast-accumulating mounds of slippery algae make navigating beaches difficult, they also produce a pretty revolting smell akin to rotting eggs as they decompose. The sargassum emits malodorous and toxic hydrogen sulfide gas as it putrefies, which can cause respiratory problems.

The seaweed’s flesh also contains arsenic, making it hazardous to humans if it gets ingested or is repurposed as fertilizer. “If you are somewhere where you are harvesting this to use as fertilizer…you have to be very concerned, particularly if you are using it for a food and fiber crop for human consumption,” Lapointe explained.

Getting rid of the stuff is also no small feat. Cleaning up the massive algae mounds along beaches costs millions of dollars, according to the Sargassum Information Hub, a joint project of various research institutions that monitors and forecasts such sargassum proliferations.

Tourism Impacts

The ominous ocean-bound mass is currently floating westward towards Florida, and will push through the Caribbean and into the Gulf of Mexico during the spring and summer months. It’s expected to arrive on beaches in the Sunshine State around July, according to Lapointe.

The research scientist said, “It’s already affected the travel industry.” To avoid undue disappointment, Lapointe suggests that travelers planning on coastal vacations this spring and summer research whether sargassum is forecast to be present in their destination. He said there are Facebook groups dedicated to the issue where users post about what they’ve recently observed on beaches.

Research into the increase in sargassum’s uncontrolled proliferation in the Atlantic annually is fairly new, so scientists don’t yet have much insight into its cause or how it will evolve from year to year.

“It’s hard to project because we don’t know everything we need to know about the drivers (behind this),” Lapointe said. “We know it’s variable from year to year and that the trajectory is generally going upwards. So based on what we’ve seen in the past, we’re thinking we could continue to see this worsen for years to come. What will it be like in 10 years? Will it be double the size it is now?”

For now, researchers are trying to devise ways to interrupt the algae’s effects on beaches and coastal tourism, perhaps by sinking the swaths to the bottom of the ocean or harvesting it for some future commercial use, such as soap production.


For the latest travel news, updates and deals, be sure to subscribe to the daily TravelPulse newsletter here.

Source: TravelPulse


Like it? Share with your friends!

170
109 shares, 170 points

What's Your Reaction?

Cute Cute
2
Cute
Fun Fun
21
Fun
Hate Hate
16
Hate
Confused Confused
5
Confused
Fail Fail
24
Fail
Geeky Geeky
18
Geeky
Love Love
10
Love
OMG OMG
5
OMG
Choose A Format
Personality quiz
Series of questions that intends to reveal something about the personality
Trivia quiz
Series of questions with right and wrong answers that intends to check knowledge
Poll
Voting to make decisions or determine opinions
Story
Formatted Text with Embeds and Visuals
List
The Classic Internet Listicles
Countdown
The Classic Internet Countdowns
Open List
Submit your own item and vote up for the best submission
Ranked List
Upvote or downvote to decide the best list item
Meme
Upload your own images to make custom memes
Video
Youtube, Vimeo or Vine Embeds
Audio
Soundcloud or Mixcloud Embeds
Image
Photo or GIF
Gif
GIF format