FREGENE, Italy - Just when you thought it was safe to go back into the water ...
In the 1975 blockbuster film “Jaws” it was a great white shark that kept holidaymakers off the beach. It is a less lethal but perhaps equally worrying menace that has closed stretches of the Mediterranean to swimmers this summer: jellyfish and seaweed.
Thousands of holidaymakers in parts of Italy and Spain have been told not to enter the water due to the threat of stings and poisoning from unusually large outbreaks of algae and jellyfish, which some ecologists say are yet another symptom of global warming
The seaweed, a toxic algae called ostreopsis ovata, has forced the closure of usually bustling beaches in Italy and caused considerable discomfort for those who entered the water.
Rosario Vizzini rushed his seven-year-old grandson Samuele to hospital when bright red welts appeared on his arms and legs after a day on the beach in northern Sicily. “The first thing they asked me was if he had been swimming, and in fact he had.”
The algae can cause skin irritations and respiratory problems and an outbreak caused a large stretch of beach near Rome to be closed for several days.
Just like in “Jaws”, local officials have been reluctant to accept the closure of beaches. In Fregene, a beach close to Rome, the mayor ignored the swimming ban and a possible $96 fine by taking to the water in an “I love Fregene” T-shirt, as a way to convince tourists his town was safe.
After the algae cleared, the coast was infested with jellyfish -- a problem that has also plagued some of the most popular beaches in Spain this August.
Tropical Mediterranean?Many scientists see the jellyfish and algae outbreaks as signs the Mediterranean is under stress, and even that it is becoming “tropicalized” -- its ecology changing due to warmer temperatures and invasive species from hotter climes.
“We already knew that the Mediterranean has started to be invaded with tropical species and its biodiversity has changed,” said biologist Isabella Barone, from the University of Palermo. “Most are not dangerous but this seaweed is as it releases toxins.”
Not a native species of the Mediterranean, the algae originates in the South Pacific, experts say, but it has been in the sea between Africa and Europe for decades, probably flushed out of the tanks of freight ships.
Raul Garcia, a fisheries expert at environmental group WWF, said the algal bloom -- a concentration of the algae on the surface -- has only become a problem in the last few years, possibly due to hotter summers.
Surface temperatures in the Mediterranean hit 84 degrees Fahrenheit during August, according to the British Meteorological Office, compared to a long-term average of 75 to 80 degrees.
Other factorsWhile the heat promotes jellyfish breeding and may change the blooming process of the algae, other factors have contributed.
Algal blooms are boosted by nitrate- and phosphate-rich pollution from farming and human waste, while jellyfish are enjoying a reduction in the number of their natural predators like loggerhead turtles and the bluefin tuna which have been devastated by overfishing, Garcia said.
Reduced river flows during hotter summers might also lead to increased numbers of jellyfish near the shore as they are no longer kept out at sea by freshwater currents.
Research by the Mediterranean Science Commission found there are 500 species of fish, crustaceans and mollusks living in the Mediterranean that are not native.
It is not new for tropical species to enter the Mediterranean through the Suez Canal, the Straits of Gibraltar or via freight ships, but warmer water and weaker indigenous species mean they now colonize the sea, rather than dying off, Garcia said.
“When these organisms arrived in the Mediterranean they didn’t find a healthy ecosystem,” said Garcia. “They found they didn’t have enemies or competition.”
Changes to the ecology will increase over the coming decades if temperatures continue to increase as predicted by many climate scientists.
A report by British and Dutch climate researchers released last month estimated that by 2080 Mediterranean beaches will be too hot for tourists to bear and by then they will be vacationing in places like Ireland and Scandinavia.
Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved
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Wednesday, August 23, 2006
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