Ernie Settembre with seaweed catch 1948/State Archives of Florida |
By Jane Feehan
South Florida beachgoers climb over smelly seaweed clumps during summer
Seaweed is called sargassum because it’s usually produced in the Sargasso Sea, a body of water—an area not bordered by any land—within the Atlantic Ocean south of Bermuda to the equator. Sargassum is composed of 50 percent nitrogen, 20 percent phosphorous and a mix of iodine, calcium, magnesium, iron, sodium and other minerals. This algae can support sea urchins (an animal, class Echinoidea), tiny shrimp and other small animals; it can be perilous for larger animals who may get tangled up in its mass.
Seaweed troubles have claimed SOFLA headlines for decades. In 1953, long-time residents said the nuisance was the worst they had seen in years. “We’re up to our necks in seaweed,” read one news account about the problem in Hollywood. An estimated 1,000 tons had washed ashore. Work gangs in Deerfield Beach cleared the mess up daily one summer.
The solution, a limited one, was to bury seaweed at the beach but it takes two years to decompose. Newspaper gardening columns promoted the use of seaweed as fertilizer after washing away the salt water, then letting it dry and decompose, a long process. Others claimed it would be a good source of food. It proved not to be – not enough protein.
The city of Fort Lauderdale devised a solution during the late 1950s. The maintenance crew of what's now known as the Public Works Department hooked up a tractor to a hopper. People came from all over to see the seaweed remover. Fort Lauderdale was the “only place in the world with such a machine.” Removal was a tricky process. If the seaweed got too dry, they’d pick up too much sand.
Photos from the Fort Lauderdale News in 1976 showed a seaweed inundation stretching from the water's edge at the beach to State Road A-1-A. Another significant event occurred in 1981. In November that year, extraordinarily high winds and seas during a king tide scooped both sand and seaweed off the beach to the west side of A-1-A near Sunrise Boulevard. The road was impassable for a brief time (yes, a flooding beach road in 1981!).Seaweed was so bad in 1991 that Florida Power and Light shut down two of its power plants (Crystal River and Vero) after sargassum clogged cooling systems.
Sargassum season runs from about March through October. Meanwhile, I have a call into the city of Fort Lauderdale to find out what machine they now use to clean the beach and where they dump the stuff these days. I may get a faster response from a lifeguard.
Copyright © 2022, 2023 All rights reserved. Jane Feehan
Sources:
American Scientist, Vol. 101, No. 6, Nov-Dec 2013
Fort Lauderdale News, June 13, 1953
Fort Lauderdale News, June 14, 1953
Fort Lauderdale News, April 24, 1962
Fort Lauderdale News, June 24, 1965
Fort Lauderdale News, Jan. 1, 1970
Fort Lauderdale News, April 12, 1970
Fort Lauderdale News, April 27, 1970
Fort Lauderdale News, Dec. 13, 1976
Fort Lauderdale News, Nov. 15, 1981
South Florida Sun-Sentinel, Aug. 15, 1991
South Florida Sun-Sentinel, April 6, 2023