 Hitching a Ride on African Dust Plumes |

February 26, 2000, A NASA satellite image captures one of the largest dust storms ever to come out of North Africa.
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By Mary Kelley HoppeHurricanes aren't the only thing that barrel
across the Atlantic
toward Florida. Giant
dust storms rising out
of the Saharan desert blow an estimated
billion tons of dust out of
Africa each year; about half of that
eventually reaches the Caribbean
and Florida, at times, invading every
state east of the Rockies. |
Contributing to everything from stuffy heads to asthma, the iron-rich dust plumes also produce spectacular red sunsets and
may be responsible for red tides.
While dust has been blowing for millennia,
dust clouds have intensified since the
early 1970s following a prolonged drought
in northern Africa. As the drought worsened,
the amount of dust hitchhiking on
trade winds across the Atlantic and into the
Gulf of Mexico increased dramatically.
Typically, Florida can expect two to three
African dust storms a month each summer,
with some riding in on hurricanes. The
amount deposited varies depending on rainfall
and other factors.
The dusty scourge that reaches our
shores is a mixture of fine particulate clay
and silica, less than 2 microns each – about a
hundred times smaller than the diameter of
a human hair. Once a particulate that small
is inhaled, it is rarely breathed out. It has
been known to contain everything from
DDT, mercury and arsenic to camel and
goat dung.
More recent studies of the particulate
have confirmed the presence of live bacteria
and fungi, microbial riders of the storm
responsible for a host of maladies from coral
disease to human respiratory ailments.
Caribbean nations downwind are at
greatest risk. Asthma afflicts nearly onequarter
of the populace of Trinidad and
Barbados, the first landfall west of the
Saharan desert. Barbados alone has seen a
17-fold increase in asthma since 1973,
according to the Caribbean Respiratory
Association.
Science-sleuths in Tampa Bay have been
studying the connections for years. “The
first thing that really caught our attention
was when the corals started dying,” says
USGS geologist Eugene Shinn.
“I’ve been studying the coral reefs for over 40 years,” he added. “I knew that the coral demise in
the Caribbean really peaked in 1983 and 1984 – and that
just happened to be the period in which the most dust was
coming over from Africa.”
The supporting data, culled from a University of
Miami dust monitoring station on Barbados in operation
since 1965, gave Shinn and others confidence they were on
the right track.
With funding from NASA in 2001, USGS hired microbiologist
Dale Griffin, who had just completed his doctoral
candidacy in public health and environmental microbiology.
“Dale hit the ground running,” Shinn said.
“Within six months he had cultured more than 120 live
microbes from dust storm samples taken in the Virgin
Islands.”
Of the 65 live microbes Griffin was able to identify,
25% were known to cause plant diseases and about 10%
were opportunistic human pathogens. Besides impacts to
marine life and human health, agricultural crops also may
be affected by spores and other organisms riding transcontinental
winds.
Microbes aren’t the only long-distance dust-hoppers.
In 1988, biologists documented the arrival of millions of
live African grasshoppers — some up to three inches long
— that had survived the trans-Atlantic dust blow to the
Caribbean. Airborne pesticides continue to rain down.
Still, it remains an uphill battle for Griffin and other
‘dust busters’ who say research has been underfunded and
undervalued, even after recent anthrax scares heightened
awareness of the potential for airborne biohazards.
Is African Dust Causing Red Tide?
Scientists also suspect a connection between African
dust and red tide, harmful algal blooms that can result in
fish kills and force costly beach closures.
“The dust coming over from Africa contains a lot of
iron,” says University of South Florida graduate student
Jason Lenes, who is completing his doctorate in biological
oceanography. When iron is deposited in the water, a certain
percentage dissolves and sparks production of bluegreen
algae.
“What’s special about the blue-green algae,” Lenes
explains, “is its ability to ‘fix’ nitrogen, converting it from
an unusable form to a usable form – and it takes a lot of
iron to do that.”
While red tide is a naturally occurring phenomenon, it
may be induced by manmade factors. “When you’re dealing
with the west Florida shelf, there aren’t a lot of nutrients
out there, so it’s hard for us to explain how we get the
amount of red tide we do.”
Lenes is modeling data from 1998 to 2001 to try to
establish concurrence between African dust, rainfall and
red tide.
While researchers can’t halt red tides, Lenes hopes the
study will give them a predictive tool that can help fingerprint
the unwelcome events weeks before they occur.
 August 8, 2001, Two massive African dust storms cross the Atlantic ocean, while another storm circles back into the Atlantic after dusting the mid-Atlantic states. The transoceanic crossing takes anywhere from five to seven days. |
Satellite images courtesy of US Geological Survey
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