A
water temperature buoy located inside the Everglades National
Park in the waters of Manatee Bay hit a high of 101.19 degrees
Fahrenheit (38.44 Celsius) late Monday afternoon, U.S.
government data showed, while other buoys nearby topped 100F
(38C) and the upper 90s (32C).
Normal water temperatures for the area this time of year should
be between 73F and 88F (23C and 31C), according to the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), which published
the findings from the National Data Buoy Center.
The readings add to previous warnings over Florida's warming
waters in the southeastern United States as prolonged heat
continued to bake other parts of the country.
The growing frequency and intensity of severe weather - both on
land and in oceans - is symptomatic of global, human-driven
climate change that is fueling extremes, experts in the field
say, with current heatwaves expected to persist through August.
Earlier this month, the United Nations' World Meteorological
Organization (WMO) said global sea temperatures have reached
monthly record highs since May, also driven in part by an El
Nino event. The WMO and NOAA say temperatures like those in
South Florida can be deadly for marine life and threaten ocean
ecosystems.
That can also impact human food supplies and livelihoods for
those who work is tied to the water.
As he worked his knife to filet fish hauled into Key Largo on
Tuesday, fishing boat captain Dustin Hansel said the catch has
been getting "slower and slower" for the past five summers. He's
also been seeing more dead fish in waters around Key Largo.
"As far as all of our bay waters, any near-shore waters,
everything is super, super hot," Hansel told Reuters.
NOAA warned earlier this month that the warmer water around
Florida could supercharge tropical storms and hurricanes, which
build more energy over warmer waters. Rising temperatures are
also severely stressing coral reefs, the agency said.
(Reporting by Maria Alejandro Cardona in Key Largo and Brad
Brooks in Lubbock, Texas; editing by Donna Bryson)
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