Small Alaskan Town Plagued by a Foul, Chartreuse Menace [View all]
No this isn't about Sarah Palin
Small Alaskan Town Plagued by a Foul, Chartreuse Menace
Fish were literally all over the beaches
we had no idea what caused it.

(
Mother Jones) Dead fish were everywhere, speckling the beach near town and extending onto the surrounding coastline. The sheer magnitude of the October 2021 die-off, when hundreds, possibly thousands, of herring washed up, is what sticks in the minds of the residents of Kotzebue, Alaska. Fish were literally all over the beaches, says Bob Schaeffer, a fisherman and elder from the Qikiqtaġruŋmiut tribe.
Despite the dramatic deaths, there was no apparent culprit. We have no idea what caused it, says Alex Whiting, the environmental program director for the Native Village of Kotzebue. He wonders if the die-off was a symptom of a problem hes had his eye on for the past 15 years: blooms of toxic cyanobacteria, sometimes called blue-green algae, that have become increasingly noticeable in the waters around this remote Alaska town.
Kotzebue sits about 40 kilometers north of the Arctic Circle, on Alaskas western coastline. Before the Russian explorer Otto von Kotzebue had his name attached to the place in the 1800s, the region was called Qikiqtaġruk, meaning place that is almost an island. One side of the two-kilometer-long settlement is bordered by Kotzebue Sound, an offshoot of the Chukchi Sea, and the other by a lagoon. Planes, boats, and four-wheelers are the main modes of transportation. The only road out of town simply loops around the lagoon before heading back in.
In the middle of town, the Alaska Commercial Company sells food thats popular in the lower 48from cereal to apples to two-bite browniesbut the ocean is the real grocery store for many people in town. Alaska Natives, who make up about three-quarters of Kotzebues population, pull hundreds of kilograms of food out of the sea every year. ............(more)
https://www.motherjones.com/environment/2023/05/blue-green-algae-cyanobacteria-fish-kills-alaska-research/