"The storms blew through Hampton Roads on a Thursday in August, and after the storms came runoff, lots of it, shooting off roofs and pavement into storm drains, and a week after the runoff came the red tide.
At Ocean View in Norfolk, the waves were mahogany with pale-red caps, stained by a sudden growth spurt of algae.
“How long have you seen it there?” Chris Moore, a science advocate for the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, asked the lifeguard on duty. “It came up, like, yesterday,” the lifeguard said.
On average days, there is a little algae in the water. After a storm, there may be 100 times more, because so much nitrogen and phosphorus – the basics of fertilizer – is flushed into the Chesapeake Bay."
Diane Tennant reports for the Norfolk Virginian-Pilot December 12, 2010.
"When It Rains, Pollutants Pour Into Chesapeake Bay"
Source: Norfolk Virginian-Pilot, 12/13/2010