Experts warn of danger to health posed by rotting sargassum

A National Autonomous University (UNAM) scientist has warned that rotting sargassum can pose a risk to human health.

Huge quantities of sargassum – a seaweed that emits a foul odor when it decomposes – have washed up on Quintana Roo beaches this year. Twenty-two beaches in the Caribbean coast state were covered with excessive quantities of the weed on Tuesday, according to the Quintana Roo Sargassum Monitoring Network, while 21 were plagued by abundant amounts.

When large quantities of sargassum decompose, gases such as hydrogen sulfide – which has a rotten egg smell – methane and ammonium are generated, said Brigitta Van Tussenbroek, a researcher at UNAM’s reef systems unit in Puerto Morelos.

“The one of greatest concern is hydrogen sulfide,” she said, explaining that chronic exposure to the gas can cause health problems, “mainly for people who have respiratory problems.”

According to the United States Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR), “just a few breaths of air containing high levels of hydrogen sulfide can cause death.”

“… Exposure to low concentrations of hydrogen sulfide may cause irritation to the eyes, nose, or throat. It may also cause difficulty in breathing for some asthmatics,” the ATSDR said. “…  Exposure to low concentrations … may cause headaches, poor memory, tiredness, and balance problems,” it added.

Those most at risk of health problems are people employed to remove sargassum from beaches. The federal Environment Ministry last year published guidelines for sargassum collectors, but they are not legally binding and consequently not adhered to all of the time, Milenio reported. Sargaceros, as such collectors are known, are supposed to wear gloves, boots and face masks when removing the seaweed from beaches, but they don’t always follow that advice, the newspaper said.

Enforceable regulations are needed, said Van Tussenbroek, adding that sensors that measure hydrogen sulfide levels could also help protect sargassum shovelers.

With reports from Milenio

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
impounded truck where over 200 migrants were traveling

229 migrants found trapped in impounded truck in Veracruz

0
The discovery of the migrants only occurred after workers at the impound lot heard shouting and banging from inside the trailer.
jaguar in Guanajuato's Sierra Gorda Biosphere Reserve

Camera traps spy a jaguar for the first time in Guanajuato’s Sierra Gorda Biosphere Reserve

0
Thanks to these new images, scientists have now confirmed the presence of all six wild cat species native to Mexico within Sierra Gorda — ocelot, margay, jaguar, jaguarundi, lynx and puma. 
a watermelon salesman

Headline inflation approaches 5% amid agricultural and energy price pressures

0
The publication of the inflation data for the first half of the month comes just two days before the Bank of Mexico (Banxico) board will decide whether to cut, maintain or increase the central bank's benchmark interest rate, which is currently set at 7%.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity