Planning a last-minute family beach vacation before summer is over? You may want to rethink that. For the past two years, more than 85% of Texas beaches tested positive for unsafe levels of fecal bacteria. Here are some of the worst offenders:
If you’ve ever seen a cautionary sign about bacteria on the beach and ignored it, it’s time to rethink that decision. A study by Environment Texas revealed that both last year and in 2017, more than 85% of salt and freshwater swimming areas contained unsafe levels of fecal matter.
Flickr/w5nyv
Ropes Park in Corpus Christi had the worst results, with unsafe bacteria levels on 24 out of 57 testing days. High amounts were also reported at Cole Park and Emerald Beach, both also located in Corpus.
Google/Abby Baron
Galveston Bay was a close runner-up, with several of its beaches containing unsafe bacteria levels on at least six testing days. Pictured here is Galveston Island State Park #6 at Bayside, which had water pollution 19% of the time.
Google/Jimbo M.
About one-eighth of samples taken from Beach Drive in Freeport had elevated fecal bacteria. No other areas in the coastal community were unsafe for swimming, however, so that’s good news!
Google/fowler77566
Palacios Pavilion East at Matagorda Bay is the final saltwater locale with significantly elevated bacteria levels. Five out of 43, or 12%, of samples were contaminated.
Flickr/adamreeder
Unfortunately, freshwater reservoirs all across Texas also contained unsafe levels of bacteria. 96 out of 100 test sites in the Houston area, including Lake Houston, were above the permitted level at least once.
Flickr/uffdah777
Visit TexasBeachWatch.com before planning a trip to check the status of a particular place. A red pin indicates unsafe levels of fecal bacteria, yellow means the risk is moderate, and green signifies little-to-no contamination.
TexasBeachWatch.com
For more information, you can read the official report here.
Flickr/w5nyv
Google/Abby Baron
Google/Jimbo M.
Google/fowler77566
Flickr/adamreeder
Flickr/uffdah777
TexasBeachWatch.com
Did you know about this shocking statistic? Let us know your thoughts, and check out our previous article to learn more about fecal bacteria in Texas waterways: These 3 Texas Beaches Have Just Been Put On Advisory Due To Fecal Bacteria.
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