n dust cloud (2000) over the Eastern Atlantic Ocean. The Sahara is the major source on Earth of mineral dust (60-200 million tons per year). Saharan dust can be lifted by
convection over hot desert areas, and can thus reach very high altitudes; from there it can be transported worldwide by winds, covering distances of thousands of kilometers. The dust combined with the extremely hot, dry air of the Sahara Desert often forms an atmospheric layer called the
Saharan Air Layer which has significant effects on tropical weather, especially as it interferes with the development of
hurricanes. deaths across the
Caribbean Sea and
Florida. (
Germany) There is a large variability in the dust transport across the
Atlantic into the
Caribbean and
Florida from year to year. In some years African dust is observed along much of the East Coast of the United States and is visible in the sky. Due to the
trade winds, very large concentrations of mineral dust can be found in the tropical Atlantic, reaching the Caribbean; moreover episodic transport to the
Mediterranean region. Saharan plumes can form
iberulites (a particular tropospheric aggregation of aerosols) when these plumes travel through North Africa and the eastern North Atlantic Ocean, and often reach the circum-Mediterranean areas of Western Europe. In the Mediterranean region, Saharan dust is important as it represents the major source of nutrients for
phytoplankton and other aquatic organisms. Saharan dust carries the fungus
Aspergillus sydowii and others. Aspergillus borne by Saharan dust falls into the
Caribbean Sea and possibly infects
coral reefs with Sea Fan disease (
aspergillosis). It also has been linked to increased incidence of pediatric
asthma attacks in the Caribbean. Since 1970, dust outbreaks have worsened due to periods of drought in Africa. Dust events have been linked to a decline in the health of
coral reefs across the
Caribbean and
Florida, primarily since the 1970s.
Effect on hurricane frequency According to a
NASA article, NASA satellites have shown that "the chilling effect of dust was responsible for one-third of the drop in North Atlantic
sea surface temperatures between June 2005 and 2006, possibly contributing to the difference in hurricane activity between the two seasons." There were only 5 hurricanes in 2006 compared with 15 in 2005. It is known that one of the major factors that create hurricanes is warm water temperatures on the surface of the ocean. Evidence shows that dust from the Sahara desert caused surface temperatures to be cooler in 2006 than in 2005. ==Asian dust==