Red Tide has returned for the season. We always see it ramp up this time of year, but it's especially prevalent following ...
Over the past week, the red tide organism Karenia brevis was detected in 85 samples collected from Florida’s Gulf Coast.
Study examines 16 years of Caloosahatchee River water releases and red tide events; finds 77% of variability in red tide events can be linked to river ...
Low concentrations of the toxin were detected this past week at New Pass Dock in Sarasota Bay, on the north end of Lido Key.
Southwest Florida waters are stained and potentially toxic as a red tide bloom rages offshore while freshwater bacteria ...
Red tide is caused by high concentrations of a toxin-producing dinoflagellate called Karenia brevis (K. brevis), a type of microscopic algae found in the Gulf of Mexico. Red tide typically forms ...
Red tide continues to affect areas along Florida's Gulf Coast, with high concentrations of the red tide organism, Karenia ...
Red tide (Karenia brevis) is caused by a naturally occurring bacteria that can become deadly when concentrations get too high. Blooms have been documented throughout modern history, but some ...
For beachgoers, this is not Red Tide (karenia brevis), but rather its equally evil fresh-water cousin. Both types of algae ...
Over the past week, through Oct. 25, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission reported the red tide organism Karenia brevis was detected in 49 samples collected from Southwest Florida.
On Oct. 25, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) reported that the red tide organism (Karenia brevis) ...
Forecasts by the USF-FWC Collaboration for Prediction of Red Tides for Pinellas County to northern Monroe County predict net western movement of surface waters and southeastern transport of subsurface ...