It's that time of year when finding a spot at your favorite beach is a lot harder to find. It's spring break season! Is there any red tide reported?
Don't want red tide to crash your spring break plans? Check out where algae is currently, what to know about blooms in ...
Don't want red tide to crash your spring break plans? Check out where algae is currently reported, what to know about blooms ...
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) reports that low concentrations of red tide continue to linger ...
UF scientist Mike Allen said that while red tide is a natural phenomenon, human factors are exacerbating the problem.
"One of the biggest things going on is that over the last couple of months we've taken over 100 billion gallons of water that ...
Red Tide is a harmful algal bloom caused by a naturally occurring alga (a plant-like microorganism) called Karenia brevis or K. brevis. When K. brevis appears in large quantities – typically in the ...
causing blooms to be called "red tides." K. brevis is found almost exclusively in the Gulf of America (formerly Gulf of Mexico) but has been recorded on Florida's east coast and off the coast of ...
Red tide has lingered in Gulf Coast waters since ... of water that was in Lake Okeechobee now is in the eastern Gulf of Mexico," Tomasko said. "Why is this red tide so big? Why is it so long ...