Article image
08-31-2016

Chile declares emergency zone due to huge toxic algal bloom

Chile declares emergency zone due to huge toxic algal bloom. This string of islands off Chile’s coast was once best known for its dramatic landscapes, rich wildlife, quaint stilt homes and colonial-era churches. But today, it is getting attention for something far less picturesque – a toxic algal bloom that is threatening its marine life and the livelihoods of the fishermen who depend on it.

“They killed our ocean,” said Marisol Millaquien, who has been out of work for weeks due to the foul-smelling blue-green algae that has coated coastal waters with a harmful scum known as a “red tide.”

Simply referred to as the “quiet catastrophe” by local fishermen, Chile’s worst-ever red tide of toxic algae has prompted the government to declare an emergency zone along the southern coast that encompasses these islands known for some of the region’s best bird watching.

Algal blooms can be lethal to fish, birds and other marine animals, emitting a toxin that paralyzes the central nervous system. Consumption of shellfish from red tide areas can also poison humans.

The view from Millaquien’s stilt home is desolate: Dozens of abandoned ghostly boats, dead birds and shellfish fill the landscape. “I’m 46. I’ve seen red tide before, but never like this,” she said.

Like many residents, she doesn’t believe scientists who say the environmental disaster was caused by warmer temperatures stemming from this year’s El Nino weather phenomenon.

Instead, she blames commercial salmon farms in Chile that she accuses of dumping contaminated fish near the coast. Millions of salmon died earlier this year due to another algal bloom that asphyxiated fish by decreasing oxygen in the water.

“We can’t catch anything now. Not even to eat, to survive,” lamented the single mother of three. “Any plague could have hit us before but we would have been fine as long as we had enough seafood.”

Fishing is the backbone of the economy for many communities along Chile’s long coast. Millaquien says she’s worried about the residents of Chiloe and how food scarcity is creating tensions among her otherwise tight-knit community.

“Some are depressed. Marriages have split up. And it all has to do with this, because there’s hunger. Children lack milk, there are bills to pay and no one can wait,” she said.

Experts say the red tide could linger for months.

Meanwhile, food and gasoline have been scarce after small-scale fishermen blocked the island from the mainland, lighting flaming barricades for days to demand more compensation from the government.

But Millaquien says she is not likely to receive any government help. Despite her years of catching seafood, she doesn’t appear on the official registry among those eligible for compensation.

Associated Press writer Eva Vergara in Santiago, Chile, contributed to this report.

Follow AP photographers and photo editors on Twitter: http://apne.ws/15Oo6jo

© 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.

News coming your way
The biggest news about our planet delivered to you each day
Subscribe