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Algae Toxins Cripple Water Supply in West Palm Beach

Algae Toxins Cripple Water Supply in West Palm Beach

Neighbors line up for safe drinking water in West Palm Beach after testing showed high levels of algae toxins. Home filtration systems don’t work in this case, and you can’t just boil it out. Could this happen in Lee County?

Is SWFL Headed for a ‘Toxic Vise’?

Is SWFL Headed for a ‘Toxic Vise’?

As Lee County commissioners plead with the feds to protect the Caloosahatchee and its estuary from excessive Lake Okeechobee releases, health officials are cautioning people to stay away from the water at three popular freshwater boat launches while at least five coastal beaches are under red tide alerts.

Blue-Green Algae Spreading into More SWFL Neighborhoods

Blue-Green Algae Spreading into More SWFL Neighborhoods

The algae situation in Southwest Florida is getting worse as a bloom decays in the Caloosahatchee. Algae first appeared in Lake Okeechobee, then at Franklin lock, the Alva Boat Ramp, and now it’s in Fort Myers at the Davis Boat Ramp.

Demand for Action on Blue-Green Algae & Cyanotoxins Increases

Demand for Action on Blue-Green Algae & Cyanotoxins Increases

More than a dozen environmental groups have been urging Governor Ron DeSantis to declare a state of emergency, but the governor says, “There’s no need to do that. One, I think it would spook a lot of people, it would harm a lot of the folks in our community.”

Blue-Green Algae Concerns Mount on Caloosahatchee Amid Rainy Season

Blue-Green Algae Concerns Mount on Caloosahatchee Amid Rainy Season

Blue-green algae has become a problem recently on the Caloosahatchee. Green and slimy blue-green algae is something many in Southwest Florida have seen in abundance in the past, and what is being seen now might not clear up soon because the rainy season is underway.

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