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-   -   Will Katrina flush the red tide? (https://www.fodors.com/community/united-states/will-katrina-flush-the-red-tide-554726/)

Dorgal Aug 27th, 2005 04:50 PM

Will Katrina flush the red tide?
 
First of all - -many prayers for all the Florida residents that Katrina will go away soon! But - Does anyone out there know if Hurricane winds and surf is likely to flush out the red tide for good? It seems like it's been around for a long time. We are going in November and hope it is long gone!

Patrick Aug 27th, 2005 07:14 PM

I have no idea why it would. Last year's four major storms and hurricanes in the Gulf didn't flush it out. Why would this one?

bonniebroad Aug 28th, 2005 02:02 AM

When we arrived in Indian Shores, Florida on June 19 this year, we were assured the Red Tide would be gone "within a day or so. It always is." It's August 28, and the problem is still there, as far as I know. There are no guarantees! Good luck, Dorgal. If you're going to worry about it a lot, I would change my plans to another destination without the possibility of this problem.

Nikki Aug 28th, 2005 03:31 AM

Could somebody please explain to me what is meant by red tide in Florida? In Massachusetts when we have red tide it is not detectable on the beach. It is just something that makes molluscs unsafe to eat until it has left the water. The clams don't die, they just are not edible until they have purged the red tide from their systems. Fish and lobsters are not affected.

But what I have seen on this message board leads me to believe that the red tide in Florida is something that makes the beach unpleasant, such as quantities of dead fish. Are these two different phenomena with the same name?

Dorgal Aug 28th, 2005 01:08 PM

Yes- I have the same question as Nikki........I also live in Massachusetts. Does it smell? Our condo is on the beach - it has a pool we could swim in - but will it REALLY stink to sit there all day? Is the state of Florida doing anything about it? Is it caused by sewerage leaking?

mikemo Aug 28th, 2005 01:42 PM

Unfortunately, Katrina looks poised to flush lots more than red tide.
M

Patrick Aug 28th, 2005 02:08 PM

"Is the state of Florida doing anything about it?"

If you have a suggestion of how to end it, I'm sure the state of Florida would be happy to know about it.

It is an "algae bloom" that causes massive fish kills. Yes, it sometimes lingers offshore for a long time. And the air is filled with a "caustic" quality that makes many of us start coughing when we get within a block of the beach. Lots of dead fish and seaweed wash up on shore. Most communties with red tide will clean them up pretty quickly, but it is the air quality associated with red tide that really bothers most of us.


OO Aug 28th, 2005 02:37 PM

Is the state of Massachusetts doing anything about it? Is it caused by sewage there? :( Come on guys!

Dorgal Aug 28th, 2005 03:25 PM

OO - Sorry to offend you!! I honestly didn't realize it was a "natural" thing that had no human solution. I always thought is was a result of unclean water - since most of our beaches here in MA are unclean to one degree or another. I just always thought when we had "red tide" it was just TOO unclean to eat shellfish or swim.
Sorry for my ignorance - I wasn't only trying to get information.

LoveItaly Aug 28th, 2005 03:32 PM

I never knew about redtide either until some families members moved to LongBoatKey. For someone in CA I sure know about the redtide now. If only there was someway to eliminate it!! I sure understand how most people in the US are not familar with the redtide.

viamar Aug 28th, 2005 06:21 PM

California has had a red tide all summer too. It causes ear, eye and throat infections. It is a natural event, but it can bloom due to outside influances. The algae grows when exposed to phosphates and nitrates, two chemicals that are found fertalizers.


LoveItaly Aug 28th, 2005 06:23 PM

Hi viamar, where has California had the redtide? I have not heard of that. Thanks.

Scarlett Aug 28th, 2005 07:08 PM

First of all, many prayers for all of those in the path of this horrific hurricane .

Since it is not even September yet, who knows when the red tides will be gone in November!

To educate yourselves on this subject, I suggest this site..it will answer a few of your questions .



http://www.surfrider.org/a-z/red_tide.asp

viamar Aug 28th, 2005 07:19 PM

Red tide has been up and down the California coast all summer. It's been real bad in Orange County. The Monterey Bay area beaches were I live have been the color of beef broth, yuck, all summer. Another good website is www.redtidealert.com.
The surfrider website is a great one for educating yourself on the health of our oceans.

LoveItaly Aug 28th, 2005 07:32 PM

Hi Scarlett and viamar, thanks to both of you for the websites. I haven't heard of any redtide alert along the N Ca shore or along the Santa Barbara/Ventura coastline. Thanks again or the websites.

Nikki Aug 29th, 2005 07:35 AM

Dorgal, to my knowledge the Massachusetts variety of red tide is not caused by unclean beaches. The beaches on Cape Cod have been fine all summer, no different during the times of red tide than they are now that it has passed. You would have no way of knowing there was red tide if you didn't hear the news. It has never been too unclean to swim.

Cape Cod newspapers had articles earlier in the summer about people staying away because they had heard about the red tide, and about efforts to publicize the fact that the beaches are clean and the fish safe to eat. If the rest of the country has a sort of red tide that causes the sort of effects described by Patrick, I can see why that would keep them away. Sounds like a totally different phenomenon with the same nickname.

nonnigrace Sep 4th, 2005 02:02 PM

ttt
any new updates on red tide?

tomboy Sep 4th, 2005 04:36 PM

See these links:
http://www.whoi.edu/redtide/whathabs/whathabs.html
http://isurus.mote.org/~mhenry/rtupdate.phtml

LN Sep 4th, 2005 05:17 PM

Hi

Actually Massachusetts' red tide is not really a whole lot different than the variety in Florida. Here are some interesting articles from the scientists in Woods Hole.

The toxins produced by A. fundyense accumulate in filter-feeding shellfish such as clams, mussels and oysters making them unsafe for people and animals to eat. There is no risk to people who consume the flesh of fish, lobsters, and shrimp or who swim in the ocean. If eaten in enough quantity, these contaminated shellfish can result in illness or even death from a poisoning syndrome called paralytic shellfish poisoning, or PSP. No cases of death attributed to PSP have been reported in New England, although this syndrome is associated with fatalities elsewhere in the U.S. and the world. Thus far there have been no human illnesses associated with the 2005 bloom.


dan_woodlief Sep 4th, 2005 05:34 PM

I think Katrina may flush some of the red tape eventually.


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