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Environmental groups claim in a lawsuit that efforts to clean up a leaky Florida reservoir that dumped tens of millions of gallons of potentially hazardous gypsum wastewater into Tampa Bay must be overseen by a federal judge to guard against continued mismanagement.
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Toxic plumes of oceanic bacteria known as red tide is continuing to move up the western Florida coast, strewing thousands of dead fish on beaches.
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Fears over red tide prompted Florida officials to briefly prohibit aquaculture farmers from harvesting in the lower Tampa Bay.
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It turns out those masks we’ve gotten accustomed to wearing have another benefit, besides reducing the spread of COVID-19.
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Along with toxic red tide blooms, a nontoxic cyanobacteria that blooms annually in the Gulf of Mexico has also been reported in the past week or so.
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Fish kills were reported in Sarasota and Charlotte counties, and respiratory irritations were also recorded there, along with Manatee County.
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The red tide organism, Karenia brevis, is persisting along Southwest Florida's coast. The toxic algae has made its way up to Manatee County from Collier County.
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Red tide appears to be clearing in Brevard County.
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Across Florida blooms of toxic algae are threatening beaches and waterways. Now the algae stands to influence the state's top political races.
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Blue-green algae hit the headlines in 2016 - clogging the waterways around the St. Lucie river with Toxic slime. The blue green algae is still around, and now there’s another aquatic menace spreading along the Atlantic coast and littering the beaches with dead fish- red tide.