Red Tide Rangers

Red Tide Rangers An elite group of volunteers trained to monitor red tides in Texas.

For summertime news you can use, Texas Sea Grant's newsletter "Get Hooked" is out (see link below) with information on h...
06/09/2024

For summertime news you can use, Texas Sea Grant's newsletter "Get Hooked" is out (see link below) with information on how to treat jellyfish stings and avoid exposure to Vibrio, and the serious conseqences of infection from this ubiquitous bacteria.

https://mailchi.mp/71f1670d73f8/get-hooked-texas-sea-grants-fisheries-aquaculture-and-seafood-newsletter-10433060

Along with the jellies, two unique sea-dwellers gave us an interesting experience on our South Texas beaches this spring. Popular South Padre Islander and photographer Tommy J. Saenz, aka Tiki Tommy, shows us a close-up of the by-the-wind sailor and it's tiny, potentially dangerous predator, the blue dragon (seen in photo below). Thank you Tommy!

Fish Printing Class Coming Soon!         Learn the Japanese Style of Fish Printing, Gyotaku, at the UTRGV Coastal Studie...
04/05/2024

Fish Printing Class Coming Soon!
Learn the Japanese Style of Fish Printing, Gyotaku, at the UTRGV Coastal Studies Lab, 100 Marine Lab Drive, Isla Blanca Park South Padre Island Texas, Saturday, April 13, 9 am -12 pm. Tony Reisinger, Cameron County Marine Extension Agent, and artist will teach the techniques used to create this unique art form and present life history information on the species you will print. The cost is $15 cash or checks Payable to RGVCTMN. Class is limited to 28, so register soon by calling the Lab at 956-761-2644 or emailing < [email protected]>. This class can be counted as credit towards becoming a Texas Coastal Naturalist.

03/04/2024

Texas Sea Grant at Texas A&M University is looking for someone to fill the position of communications manager. See the link below:

Our Texas Sea Grant Seafood Trail is growing:
01/07/2024

Our Texas Sea Grant Seafood Trail is growing:

A lot of shrimp is imported from overseas, and several businesses and restaurants that serve shrimp don't tell customers where it comes from

Check out the latest issue of our newsletter "The Chachalaca" chock full of interesting and educational articles by tale...
12/24/2023

Check out the latest issue of our newsletter "The Chachalaca" chock full of interesting and educational articles by talented and knowledgable authors from our Rio Grande Valley and South Texas Border Chapters Texas Master Naturalists:

https://rgvctmn.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/Winter-2023-issue-of-The-Chachalaca-fixed.pdf

Texas Parks & Wildlife marine biologist W***y Cupit was presented his long overdue and well-earned Texas Red Tide Ranger...
10/02/2023

Texas Parks & Wildlife marine biologist W***y Cupit was presented his long overdue and well-earned Texas Red Tide Ranger and Texas Coastal Naturalist pins at the UTRGV Coastal Studies Lab during last week's Red Tide Ranger training. W***y helped train 15 attendees, relating valuable lessons from red tide blooms he experienced during his career.

We still have room at the Red Tide Ranger training this Saturday.From the McAllen Monitor yesterday:  A trace of red tid...
09/27/2023

We still have room at the Red Tide Ranger training this Saturday.
From the McAllen Monitor yesterday:
A trace of red tide was briefly detected at South Padre Island
By
Dina Arévalo
-September 26, 2023

A Cameron County employee walks the beach picking up litter at Isla Blanca Park on South Padre Island on July 19, 2022. A trace of red tide was detected at two beach accesses there last week. (Denise Cathey | Coastal Current)

Officials with the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department have announced that red tide has recently been detected along the Texas coastline, including at two locations off South Padre Island.
The toxic algae, known as Karenia brevis, was detected in the waters at two city beach accesses last week, according to Tony Reisinger, Cameron County extension agent for coastal and marine resources with Texas Sea Grant.
By Friday, however, water testing returned no trace of the algae cells.
“We tested Friday and we didn’t have any cells off of South Padre. Zero. It zeroed out at the end of last week,” Reisinger said on Monday.Small amounts of the algae were detected in the waters off the Good Hope Circle Beach Access 21 on the north side of the city, and farther south at the Gulf Circle Beach Access 3.
Two different kinds of the harmful algae were detected in samples pulled last week — Karenia brevis and Karenia papilionacea, so named because its cells resemble butterflies.
“The cells on both of those are called ‘unarmored,’ so they do break up and get picked up by the wind,” Reisinger said.
A swimmer and former Red Tide Ranger — a citizen scientist trained to observe the environment for signs of harmful algal blooms — also reported red tide aerosols while swimming at the southern end of the Island on Friday, though no cells were detected, Reisinger said.
Officials detected low to moderate concentrations of the algae further up the Texas coast, near Freeport and Galveston Bay, as well as a pocket of high concentration in the Houston Ship Channel.
Red tide is also suspected to have caused fish kills consisting of red drum, flounder, spotted sea trout and other fish species along Matagorda and San Antonio bays, according to data published by Texas Parks and Wildlife.
Red tide is a naturally occurring algae that can form algal blooms under the right conditions.
During heavy blooms, dense ribbons of rust can often be seen staining the surf.
With its weak cell walls, wind and wave action can be enough to break the algae’s cells apart, causing them to release a neurotoxin called brevetoxin that can be lethal to fish.
Waves and wind can also cause the neurotoxin to become aerosolized, which in turn, can have a detrimental effect on people and pets — especially those with respiratory conditions, such as asthma.
Exposure to the toxin can cause irritation to the eyes, nose and throat, as well as coughing and sneezing.
South Padre Island has experienced several of the harmful algal blooms in recent years, but perhaps the most significant came in the fall of 2015, when a bloom erupted in late September of that year and persisted through parts of November.
At the time, the irritating algae put a small damper on some of the city’s most highly anticipated fall events, including Sandcastle Days, when artists from across the globe descend on the Island to partake in a sandcastle building competition.
Officials reported isolated fish kills during that bloom, and again during a bloom in the fall of 2016.
However, aside from the one isolated report of aerosols last week, officials have received no other reports of aerosols, fish kills or other detrimental effects thus far, Reisinger said.
Tracking the blooms can be tricky.
“It’s patchy stuff,” Reisinger said, explaining how a red tide bloom may be hyper localized.
“You can’t predict red tide. … The only thing predictable about it is that it’s unpredictable,” he added.
That’s why it’s so important to have citizen scientists willing to volunteer their time.
As a result, in the 1990s, Reisinger founded the Red Tide Rangers, a group of citizen scientists who regularly collect water samples from various locations on the gulf and bay side waters off South Padre Island.
The Rangers can help officials determine where the patches are.
“For people to be able to know where it is and where they can enjoy the beach? That’s extremely important because the economy — especially at South Padre Island — depends on tourism,” Reisinger said.
Reisinger will be training a new crop of Rangers this weekend during a session hosted by the South Texas Border Chapter of the Texas Master Naturalists.
The training will take place on Saturday at the Coastal Studies Lab, 100 Marine Lab Drive, located within Isla Blanca Park. The class will begin at 9 a.m.
Those interested may register via email at [email protected]. Registration is $15 per person and seating is limited to 25.

South Padre Island dodged a bullet. After a 5-year hiatus, red tide grazed our coast without showing its true colors, th...
09/22/2023

South Padre Island dodged a bullet. After a 5-year hiatus, red tide grazed our coast without showing its true colors, then quickly headed south with the Red Tide Rangers in hot pursuit!

Researchers are on the lookout for red tide at South Padre Island.

More on our struggling wild caught shrimp industry.....
08/10/2023

More on our struggling wild caught shrimp industry.....

Third-generation shrimp fisher E.J. Cuevas on how the industry has been affected by plummeting prices, rising fuel costs and difficulty to obtain a workforce.

Address

Cameron County Extension Office, 1390 W Expressway 83
San Benito, TX
78586

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 5pm
Tuesday 8am - 5pm
Wednesday 8am - 5pm
Thursday 8am - 5pm
Friday 8am - 5pm

Telephone

(956) 493-8129

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