New algal bloom threat on the move | Infrastructure news

Algae imageMore than 100 people have fallen ill because of a toxic algal bloom covering nine tenths of Utah Lake in the USA. The dangerous algal bloom is now spreading to nearby waterways, officials say. 

The algal bloom that has turned water bright green exceeds the medium risk threshold of 100 000 cells. The people exposed to the bloom have reported symptoms of vomiting, diarrhoea and fever.

The cyanobacteria cells contained in the algal bloom release higher levels of toxins when they die. Therefore, even though the algae bloom is decreasing in size, it is actually becoming more dangerous

Florida in the USA has also been having trouble after a 33 square mile algal bloom crept over Lake Okeechobee earlier this year. Almost exactly a year before this Florida bloom, another bloom stretching 7 500 square miles washed ashore in Qingdao, China, a popular beach destination.

Algal blooms have caused problems around the world, including Africa. A severe algal bloom swept through South Africa’s west coast last year, killing an estimated two hundred tons of rock lobsters.

Decades of research and billions of dollars have been spent in an attempt to understand the causes of toxic algae blooms, however there have been few results to solve the dangerous threat to the world’s oceans and fresh water reserves.

Findings show that algae blooms and dead zones – the low-oxygen areas that form when vast algal blooms die – are a result of the influx of fertilizer, manure and wastewater into lakes, rivers and oceans.

Algal blooms and dead zones have been considered a major problems for decades, and many countries including the United States, Europe, Australia, China have since spent billions of dollars on research and remedies to the nutrient pollution it causes.

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