Red tide continues to linger along Florida's Gulf Coast, with high concentrations of the harmful algae Karenia brevis ...
Red tide continues to plague Florida's Gulf Coast, with high concentrations of the harmful algae Karenia brevis detected in ...
For wanting to end their winter break with a Florida beach day, make sure there isn't an unexpected visitor. Check reports of red tide as of Jan. 2 ...
The heaviest concentrations of the toxin were found this week at four locations around Venice and at Indian Mound Park, near ...
Forecasts by the USF-FWC Collaboration for Prediction of Red Tides for Pinellas County to northern Monroe County predict variable movement of surface and subsurface waters over the next 3.5 days.
Red tide comes from an organism that occurs naturally in the ocean. But people can make these harmful algal blooms worse.
According to a study partially funded by NASA, Saharan dust brings nutrients into the Gulf of Mexico off Florida’s West Coast that may kick off blooms of red tide. This is largely due to iron ...
This bloom started last summer, when it seemed to follow the trail of several hurricanes that made impacts on varying parts of the west coast of Florida.
K. brevis is found almost exclusively in the Gulf of Mexico but has been recorded on Florida's east coast and off the coast of North Carolina. Worried red tide could ruin your upcoming trip to the ...