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agricultural runoff

The Great Atlantic Sargassum Belt

October 17, 2025 By EarthWise Leave a Comment

Sargassum is a free-floating brown seaweed that can drift together in vast mats, sometimes stretching for miles across the ocean’s surface. For centuries, these blooms have been a natural part of the Atlantic, creating food and shelter for many marine creatures.  Sargassum was once thought to be confined mainly to the Sargasso Sea in the western Atlantic, but scientists now know it grows rapidly and spreads widely, driven both by natural forces and by nutrients from human activities.

Scientists at Florida Atlantic University have reviewed 40 years of data on sargassum seaweed. Their study, which was recently published in the journal Harmful Algae, points to the rise of what is now called the Great Atlantic Sargassum Belt – a massive seaweed bloom stretching from West Africa to the Gulf of Mexico. First spotted in 2011, it has since appeared every year except in 2013.  This past May, the bloom reached a record 37.5 million tons, a number that does not include the 7.3 million tons in the Sargasso Sea.

Sargassum thrives in nutrient-rich waters.  Under ideal conditions, controlled studies found sargassum can double its biomass in just eleven days!  According to the scientists, nutrient pollution from agriculture and wastewater has fueled these record blooms.

In the ocean, sargassum provides habitat for fish, turtles, and other marine life.  But along the coast, it piles up in smelly heaps, clogs waterways, disrupts tourism, and can even threaten power plants.

Understanding why sargassum is spreading so rapidly is key to tackling a problem that now spans an entire ocean.

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A monster seaweed bloom is taking over the Atlantic

Photo, posted December 24, 2014, courtesy of Roban Kramer via Flickr.

Earth Wise is a production of WAMC Northeast Public Radio

Working Forest Buffers | Earth Wise

April 15, 2020 By EarthWise Leave a Comment

Forest Buffer Zones on Farms

More than 100,000 miles of U.S. rivers and streams are polluted by nitrogen and phosphorus, mostly from agricultural runoff.  In the past, forests grew naturally alongside these waterways and helped stabilize stream banks and decrease flooding while trapping and filtering pollutants.  But most of these forests have been cut down to make way for towns, cities, livestock, and crops.

Farmers are reluctant to retire valuable farmland with non-productive buffer planting.  But in Pennsylvania, there is an innovative program that encourages farmers to plant cash crops in waterway buffer zones that can help stabilize stream banks and clean up the waterways.  These plantings are called working buffers.

Strips of streamside land are replanted with native floodplain trees and shrubs.  These are known as riparian forest buffers.  Pennsylvania has instituted a grant program under which farmers and landowners plant these buffers and turn a profit.

Many of these buffers have three zones.  A conventional forest buffer that can be just 15 feet wide is composed of native woodland and stabilizes the bank with tree roots and enhances wildlife habitat.  A second zone, some 20 feet wide, is planted with trees and shrubs that can tolerate periodic flooding.  Apart from slowing floodwater and taking up nutrients, this zone can provide profits by planting trees like black walnut, hazelnut, persimmon, and elderberry.  Only hand harvesting is allowed.  A third zone, adjacent to conventional crop, can contain blueberries, raspberries, and decorative woody florals.

How many farmers can be enticed to create these riparian buffers remains to be seen, but they do represent a way to help farmers to reduce pollution and turn a profit along the way.

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A Movement Grows to Help Farmers Reduce Pollution and Turn a Profit

Photo, posted March 19, 2010, courtesy of the USDA via Flickr.

Earth Wise is a production of WAMC Northeast Public Radio.

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