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ISTANBUL (AFP) .- Thick, brown, bubbly foam dubbed “marine mucus” covered the shores of the Sea of Marmara, alarming Istanbul residents and raising new environmental concerns.
Naturally occurring mucilage was first documented in Turkey in 2007, when it was also observed in parts of the Aegean Sea near Greece.
But this outbreak is the largest on record, attributed by experts to a combination of pollution and global warming, which is accelerating the growth of the algae responsible for the slimy sludge.
Associate Professor Muharrem Balci of Istanbul University said that when algae grows uncontrollably in the spring, as it did this year, blocking the sun and causing the oxygen depletion of the fish in the sea.
The mud licking Istanbul’s shores comes from a kind of nutrient overload for the algae, which revel in the hot weather and water pollution that has gradually worsened over the past 40 years, has Balci said.
“This mucilage now covers the surface of the sea like the canvas of a tent”, Balci told AFP news agency.
“After a while, this blanket collapses to the bottom and covers the ecosystem (at the bottom of the sea).” It could poison sea mussels and creatures like crabs.
Cevahir Efe Akcelik, an environmental engineer and general secretary of the Union of Engineering and Architectural Chambers of Turkey, said the foam could cover the sea all summer unless urgent measures are taken.
“Studies show that the mucilage is not only on the surface now, but also reaches a depth of 25 to 30 meters.”
The Sea of Marmara, which stretches along the southern coast of Istanbul from the Bosporus to the Aegean Sea, is densely populated and is home to many industrial sites.
Balci said it also absorbs some of the waste that drains into the Black Sea adjacent to the polluted Danube that runs through Eastern Europe.
“This is an additional burden on the Sea of Marmara,” Balci said, calling for a collective action plan for all the coastal towns of the sea.
The workers try to remove the mud with nets, but so far their efforts have proved largely ineffective.
Ali Oztunc, an MP from the main opposition CHP party, urged the government to impose tough penalties on waste disposal facilities that do not follow the rules.
“The Sea of Marmara is an inland sea but, unfortunately, it is turning into an inland desert due to bad environmental policies,” he said.
Photos: Yasin Akgul / AFP
Photo montage: Enrique Villegas
THE NATION
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