Monday, May 6, 2024

Quintana Roo beaches report low sargassum levels

Quintana Roo beaches registered low levels of sargassum on Monday, a local beach monitoring network reported.

Sargassum, a yellowish-brown macroalgae (seaweed) which can release a foul odor, typically makes landfall around May and peaks in June and July. This year, however, it arrived as early as April.

Sargassum monitoring
Sargassum monitoring of Quintana Roo beaches published on Monday. (Red de Monitoreo del Sargazo de Q Roo/Facebook)

According to the monitoring network, there are low quantities of the seaweed in the northern part of the state, with the exception of Coral Beach, Riviera Cancun, Moon Palace, Royalton Riviera, Petempich Bay and Punta Caracol, all of which report moderate presence of sargassum.

Of 100 beaches monitored by the Quintana Roo Sargassum Monitoring Network (RMSQR), 68 are currently listed as “green” or low sargassum, and eight qualify for the “blue” sargassum free advisory.

In the last two weeks of May, the Navy (Semar) reported collecting 3,240 tons of sargassum off the coast of Quintana Roo.  

According to The New York Times, the Great Atlantic Sargassum Belt (GASB) has grown abnormally since 2011, in large part because of excessive, nutrient-rich overflow from the Congo, Amazon and Mississippi rivers. In March 2023, the GASB grew to an estimated 13.5 million metric tons of seaweed according to a study released in April by the University of Florida. 

Sargassum on a beach near Playa del Carmen.
Sargassum on a beach near Playa del Carmen in 2022. (Deposit Photos)

However, in its May 30 bulletin, the University of South Florida’s Optical Oceanography Laboratory reported that the GASB, which in April measured 8,000 kilometers in width, shrank 15% in size during May – a decrease that “had never happened before at this time of year,” researchers wrote.  

But the reduction was not uniform: though sargassum presence fell sharply in the eastern Atlantic and the Caribbean, it rose slightly in the Central West Atlantic and the Gulf of Mexico. 

With reports from Quadrantin Quintana Roo, The New York Times, La Lista and El Economista

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Waterfall in the Huasteca Potosina

5 places to visit in Mexico if you like nature, adventure and fewer crowds

1
Mexico News Daily CEO Travis Bembenek shares his personal favorite destinations in Mexico for nature-loving, adventurous travelers.

When is the best time to visit Mexico City?

0
The Mexican capital teems with activity and atmosphere year round, but when is the best time to plan a visit to Mexico City?
The sun shines above a woman holding a fan

Scorching temperatures in the forecast thanks to Mexico’s second heat wave of the year

2
In six states, temperatures are forecast to surpass 45 C.