Using Localized Twitter Activity for Red Tide Impact Assessment
A. Skripnikov (1), N. Wagner (1), J. Shafer (2), M. Beck (3), E., Sherwood (3), M. Burke (3) ((1) New College of Florida, (2) Science and, Environment Council of Southwest Florida, (3) Tampa Bay Estuary Program)

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that Twitter activity correlates strongly with red tide conditions, suggesting social media can be a valuable real-time tool for assessing environmental impacts and aiding disaster response.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach to use localized Twitter data for real-time red tide impact assessment, integrating sentiment and user type analysis.
Findings
Strong correlation between Twitter activity and red tide conditions.
Twitter activity varies with proximity to affected areas.
Social media can serve as a reliable proxy for environmental impact assessment.
Abstract
Red tide blooms of the dinoflagellate Karenia brevis (K. brevis) produce toxic coastal conditions that can impact marine organisms and human health, while also affecting local economies. During the extreme Florida red tide event of 2017-2019, residents and visitors turned to social media platforms to both receive disaster-related information and communicate their own sentiments and experiences. This was the first major red tide event since the ubiquitous use of social media, thus providing unique crowd-sourced reporting of red tide impacts. We evaluated the spatial and temporal accuracy of red tide topic activity on Twitter, taking tweet sentiments and user types (e.g. media, citizens) into consideration, and compared tweet activity with reported red tide conditions, such as K. brevis cell counts, levels of dead fish and respiratory irritation on local beaches. The analysis was done on…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOil Spill Detection and Mitigation · Marine and coastal ecosystems · Tropical and Extratropical Cyclones Research
