Reports of algal blooms have increased in the past 10 years, as no more than 100 blooms were reported in 2010. Anne Schechinger, a senior economic analyst at EWG, thinks that climate change is one of the major factors driving their increase.
"Algae blooms flourish and occur more frequently when nutrients like phosphorous and nitrogen wash into water bodies and combine with heat and sunlight," said Schechinger.
In 2019, authorities recorded 419 algal blooms in the United States. That's 98 more than this year's record by the EWG. According to the organization, which has been tracking outbreaks of algal blooms for more than a decade, reports are down this year due to budget cutbacks in various states in response to the coronavirus pandemic. The Utah Department of Environmental Quality tested 60 rivers and lakes in previous years but was only able to test 18 areas in 2020.
‘Those 18 are largely state parks," department director Erica Gaddis stated. ‘They’re really the areas where the public is most likely to interact directly with the water body, and where we’ve had issues of algal blooms in the past.’
In this year's report, about 86 percent of the areas hit by algal blooms are for recreational use. Authorities have also reported that seven dogs and nine heads of cattle died in eight other locations due to exposure to the harmful blooms.
The EWG warns Americans planning to go to beaches to watch out for the blooms, as high doses of the toxins released in algal blooms were previously linked to liver damage.
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