Environmental Updates

On any given day, Mote's 200-plus researchers are in the field collecting information or asking for public help gathering information for important marine research studies. These Environmental Updates change regularly, reflecting Florida's ever-changing environment. Mote invites you to visit regularly for new information.


Beach Conditions Report

The Beach Conditions Report provides several types of information about Southwest Florida beaches during red tide events: whether dead fish are present, whether there is respiratory irritation among beachgoers, what the water color is, the wind direction and what flags are currently flying at the beaches (for lifeguard-monitored beaches).

The Beach Conditions ReportTM covers 31 beaches in nine Florida counties:
• Escambia County: Pensacola Beach
• Okaloosa County: Fort Walton Beach, Henderson Beach State Park and Destin Beach
• Gulf County: St. Joseph Peninsula State Park, both Gulfside and Bayside
• Franklin County: St. George Island State Park , both Bayside and Gulfside
• Pinellas County: Caladesi Island State Park, Fort DeSoto Park
• Manatee County: Manatee Beach, Coquina Beach
• Sarasota County: Lido Key, Siesta Key, Nokomis, Venice North Jetty, Venice Beach, Manasota Beach
• Lee County: Bowditch Point Park, Lynn Hall Beach Park, Lovers Key State Park, Bonita Beach, Tarpon Bay Beach, Lighthouse Point on Sanibel Island
• Collier County: Barefoot Beach, Vanderbilt Beach, Seagate Beach, Lowdermilk Park, Naples Pier, Tigertail Beach, South Marco Beach




The information is provided from a number of different sources, including lifeguards, park rangers and other trained observers. They're able to report the information directly to the web from the beaches thanks to Mote’s Sarasota Operations Coastal Ocean Observation Laboratory (SO COOL), which has created software that automatically posts the updates online.

Residents and visitors without Internet access may also access the report by calling 941-BEACHES (941-388-5223).

Reports are updated at 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. daily to coincide with times of the day when people are most likely to use the beach. The information is date and time stamped so the public knows how recent a report is.

The system began operating Sept. 1, 2006.

The Beach Conditions Report is implemented by Mote’s Environmental Health Program. Project partners include the Florida Department of Health, Sarasota County Lifeguard Operations and others. The information gathered for the Beach Conditions Report is also shared with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which formulates a HAB Bulletin, that predicts the movements of harmful algal blooms. The Beach Conditions Report should help enhance NOAA’s forecast ability. HAB Bulletin link.

Hints for visiting beaches during red tide blooms:

  1. Check the marine forecast, fewer red tide toxins will be in the air with offshore winds.
  2. If you experience respiratory irritation, wear a mask, such as a painters mask, that covers the nose and mouth to filter out marine aerosol particles that contain the red tide toxins.
  3. If you are asthmatic or have chronic lung disease, be vigilant about taking your prescribed medicines daily.
  4. Always seek medical care if your symptoms worsen.
  5. For your home or motel room, keep your windows closed, the A/C on, and check/change the unit's filter.


Red Tide

Mote Marine Laboratory's Center for Ecotoxicology studies Karenia brevis, the organism that causes red tides in Florida. See a short video about red tide on MoteTV. Click here for answers to Frequently Asked Questions about red tide.

Click here for a primer on the differences between red tide and red drift algae.

Red Tide Updates are made here as conditions change. There are currently no blooms reported in Southwest Florida.

Seafood Information
Please note that it is safe to eat shellfish that are commercially harvested and sold in fish markets, restaurants and other outlets. Florida has a well-established monitoring program for all commercial shellfish beds and these beds are closed when affected by red tide or other environmental conditions. Note: It is not advisable to harvest shellfish recreationally, unless you first check on the status of the location (open or closed) with the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. Click here for more information.

For recreational fishing: Fish that act as they would normally when hooked should be safe to eat as long as they are fileted first and the innards discarded.

More Information
For conditions throughout the Florida Gulf coast, with information about cell concentrations observed at specific locations and closed shellfish areas, please see the FWC web site (www.myfwc.com) and follow the link to “Red Tide Current Status.” The FWC Red Tide Status Line is now available to callers to hear a recording detailing red tide conditions throughout the state. FWC updates the recording each Friday by 5 p.m. after sampling efforts for the week have been completed and analyzed.

Red Tide Status Line: (866) 300-9399 (toll-free inside Florida only); (727) 552-2448 (outside Florida).

For information about the Human Health and Red Tide Studies funded by the National Institutes for Environmental Health Services, click here.

If you need immediate assistance regarding health related issues, please call the Marine and Freshwater Toxin hotline at 1-888-232-8635. It is staffed 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

For more information about water conditions on Sarasota County beaches, please click on this link to the Sarasota County Healthy Beaches website.

A red tide Q&A with Mote researchers from the Sarasota Herald-Tribune

Info on Trichodesmium



Sawfish Sightings

Mote staff collect reports of sawfish sightings from the public. The information helps to determine the distribution and abundance of the endangered sawfish, and helps scientists examine and understand how sawfish use different habitats. People catching or sighting a sawfish are asked to contact Mote Marine Laboratory.


Florida Keys Environmental Observations

Mote's Marine Ecosystem Event Response and Assessment Program is operated in the Florida Keys through the Tropical Research Laboratory and it invites members of the public who frequent the waters of the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary and its surrounding areas to provide information about unusual events they witness in that ecosystem. The project is designed to help the scientific community better understand the nature and causes of marine events that adversely affect marine organisms and to assist ongoing research efforts to understand and assess new events.

There is no specialized training necessary to participate. No paperwork is required. By simply providing information about unusual events - what they were, where they were and when they were - residents can help alert scientists to potential large-scale problems before they develop. Past reports have included information about coral disease or bleaching, algal blooms or discolored water, diseased or dead animals and sick or stranded marine mammals and sea turtles.


Sea Turtle Nesting Updates

Sea turtles nest along Southwest Florida beaches from May through October. Mote's Sea Turtle Conservation and Research Program monitors 35 miles of beaches in Sarasota and Manatee counties daily to check for new nests.


Marine Mammal & Sea Turtle Strandings

Mote Marine Laboratory’s Stranding Investigations Program responds 24 hours a day seven days a week to reports of sick, injured and dead marine mammals and sea turtles for animals in Sarasota and Manatee county waters. Live animals are brought back to Mote’s Dolphin and Whale Hospital or Sea Turtle Rehabilitation Hospital for treatment and the deceased animals undergo a detailed post-mortem examination so that we may learn more about the natural history of these animals and evaluate long-term trends in mortality.

Within Sarasota or Manatee county waters, if you see a stranded or dead dolphin, whale or sea turtle, please call Mote's Stranding
Investigations Program, a 24-hour response service, at 941-988-0212.

If you see a stranded or dead manatee anywhere in state waters or a stranded or dead dolphin, whale or sea turtle outside of Sarasota or Manatee counties please call the FWC Wildlife Alert hotline at 888-404-FWCC (3922).

 


Weather

Mote has been operating its own weather station since 1980. Check here for current conditions and historical information.

 

About Us

Mote Marine Laboratory has been a leader in marine research since it was founded in 1955. Today, we incorporate public outreach as a key part of our mission. Mote is an independent nonprofit organization and has seven centers for marine research, the public Mote Aquarium and an Education Division specializing in public programs for all ages.

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