The Santa Ana winds that roared through Southern
California, creating havoc for firefighters and downing trees and power poles,
may also have brought an unexpected problem: water pollution.
High
bacteria readings were reported at 14 sites along Orange County's coast from
Laguna Beach to Huntington Beach. The pollutants may have been carried from
distant inland farms and dairies to the coastal waters by the fierce winds,
several experts said.
The spiked readings resulted in warnings to beach swimmers, divers and surfers. There were no beach closures.
County health officials said the findings are unusual because most of the
sites, such as Bolsa Chica State Beach, are not near storm drains or creek
mouths and there was no rain during the most recent testing period. Storm
drains in particular are blamed for funneling pollutants into the ocean.
"One
of the causes could be from the high winds that we had for the last few days,"
said Monica Mazur, a county environmental health division spokeswoman. "But
that's only a guess, because there are no scientific studies to rely on."
Orange
County has experienced bacteria spikes in the past after offshore winds,
but not to this extent. High counts also occur when high surf and high tides
combine to flood coastal areas and flush out pollutants, Mazur said.
In
Los Angeles, similar bacteria counts failed to materialize, though a few
beaches near stream and river mouths where contaminants are found were posted
for elevated bacteria counts.
Richard Kebabjian, chief of the recreation
health program in Los Angeles County, said he discounted the winds' effect
and instead blamed the weekend's high surf and high tides. Sometimes an algae
bloom can cause high bacteria readings, he said.
Pinpointing the cause
of the elevated readings along the Orange County coast may be impossible.
Such source tracking is expensive and currently unavailable at the county
level, although several environmental laboratories are working on ways to
track sources of pollution.
With gusts reaching more than 100 mph
in some places, debris could have included fertilizer and animal waste from
inland agricultural areas.
A UC Irvine professor who studies atmospheric
physics said bacteria, like pollen, can hitch rides on dust particles from
the desert and travel to the sea during large dust storms.
Charles
Zender, a professor of earth system science, said that even though dust particles
can be as small as one-fifth the width of a human hair, "there's plenty of
room for hitchhikers."
Of the three bacteria indicators used in the
recent water testing, only the enterococcus was high in recent samples, Mazur
said. That indicates the bacteria were not from a fresh source because enterococcus,
which comes from warm-blooded mammals and birds, lasts longer in the environment,
she said.
Chad Nelsen, the Surfrider Foundation's environmental director,
said he finds the wind theory plausible. "We've had dust storms in the Sahara
Desert that blow across the Mediterranean Sea, so it's highly likely the
Santa Anas were responsible," he said.
Large dust plumes that can carry pollutants often cover entire regions in other parts of the world, Zender said.
Along
with thousands of others in Orange County, Zender said he saw a plume of
dust coming from the San Gabriel Mountains toward the coast.
The National
Aeronautics and Space Administration posted a photograph taken Monday from
a satellite on its Web site -- http://naturalhazards.nasa.gov/ -- that showed
dust and smoke being blown across California and into the Pacific from winds
that raked the interior deserts and other dry areas.
Zender said earth
system science helps explain how smoke and ash from volcanoes can cover the
globe and how dust storms from Asia travel over the Pacific and can produce
spectacular sunsets in California.

