A massive red tide has swamped the eastern coast of south
China's Shenzhen since September 1, and so far covering more than
15 square kilometers of water.
According to the Shenzhen Ocean and Fishery Observation Station
(SOFOS), this red tide is non-toxic and is currently doing no harm
to fish or the marine food industry. The local government has
notified nearby shrimp ponds to strengthen their water oxygenation
systems and to stop draining ocean water.
People have been warned not to swim in the Dameisha area, where
the highest density of the algae that cause the red tide is
found.
It is the second time that red tides have bloomed along
Shenzhen's east coast within a month, and the sixth the area has
experienced so far this year. In the middle of August, severe red
tides swept over several areas along the coast in succession but
ebbed about a week later.
Professor Zhou Kai, of SOFOS, said that the primary cause of the
frequent outbreaks is the release into the sea of large amounts of
untreated sewage. Also, overfishing has resulted in a sharp
decrease of shallow-water fish and shrimp stocks that are able to
feed on algae.
Shenzhen has established 31 coastal observation stations to
watch for red tide outbreaks. There are 33 red tide supervision
centers nationwide, with 13 along the South China Sea coast.
In late August, the Chinese Society of Oceanography set up the
country's first national red tide research and prevention
committee. Also in August, the National Marine Environmental
Monitoring Center completed a national red tide information
management system. The center has recorded data concerning marine
problems since 1993.
Red tides are caused by several species of microscopic marine
algae that may produce potent chemical toxins. Such tides actually
vary in color depending on the kind of algae involved, but they
share the potential to harm or destroy aquatic life, either by
poisoning the water or depleting its oxygen supply. Toxic forms
contaminate shellfish and cause severe respiratory irritation in
humans along the shore.
Chinese scientists are experimenting with ways of containing or
dispersing red tides, but no completely effective method is yet
available for preventing red tides or for stopping them when they
start.
(China Daily, China.org.cn September 6, 2004)
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