Rowers on the River Po in Turin are battling vast blooms of algae, as high temperatures in northwest Italy and runoff from farms create ideal conditions for rampant plant growth.
"Look at these (plants), if you put your oar in, they wouldn't let it go," rowing coach Roberto Romanini told AFP, as four rowers struggled through a patch of green slime.
Sitting between the Alpine chain on one side and hills on the other, heavily urbanized Turin has suffered soaring temperatures this summer, as heat waves intensified by man-made climate change have gripped Italy.
And the Po, Italy's longest river, is struggling.
It has experienced a significant decline in flow, down 50 percent from its yearly average, due to low rainfall and persistently high temperatures in June and July.
Despite that, dozens of plant species have been blooming since May.
"It looks like a meadow," 60-year-old Romanini said, adding that he had "never seen anything like it."
Tearing tangled plants off his motorboat's propeller, he noted, "The river is changing, the climate is changing."
'Exceptional'
At the dike that has controlled the river's level since the 19th century, a thick layer of algae trapped various bottles and a shoe.
Local species such as Spirogyra, known as mermaid's tresses, and the blanket weed Cladophora mingle with the invasive Blitum nuttallianum—or Nuttall's povertyweed, which is native to North America.
Further upstream, herons have nested under the historic stone Isabella Bridge, and their chicks are taking advantage of the thick layer of vegetation to learn how to walk.
Algae have always been present in the Po, but climate change "makes these phenomena more extreme," said Turin Deputy Mayor Francesco Tresso, calling this year's proliferation "quite exceptional."
"It's no longer really a river, but rather a warm lake," reaching temperatures of 28°C (82°F) even though it originates in the nearby Alps, he told AFP.
"Agricultural nutrients from livestock farms are also dumped throughout the basin, which means that plants find an ideal environment here to thrive," he said.
Alice de Marco, the local head of environmental organization Legambiente, said the algae blooms were encouraged "above all by excess nutrients" from farms.
She said a large part of the solution would be "limiting, reducing, or even eliminating the use of pesticides in agriculture."
This mass of vegetation "has an impact on the food chain—it reduces the oxygen level underwater, affecting other plants and animals," she said.
'More respect'
Algae have also invaded Lake Iseo in neighboring Lombardy this summer, as well as further afield, from canals in France to the Ebro River in Zaragoza, Spain.
Turin wants to make the Po one of its star attractions: Two river shuttles are scheduled to resume service in 2027, and the city council has renovated a large park next to the river.
But first, it needs to get rid of the green weeds.
Near Turin's mock medieval village, an excavator perched on a barge pulls up clumps of dripping algae.
A truck comes every morning to collect the plants, which are then turned into compost. More than 150 tons (136 tonnes) have been removed in three weeks, at a cost of approximately 100,000 euros ($115,000).
Secondo Barbero, director of the Piedmont Environmental Protection Agency, noted that there is a correct way to remove it.
"The plant shouldn't be cut but uprooted; otherwise, the cut parts can generate new plants," while also contaminating downstream riverbanks, he said.
The growth should slow with the drop in temperatures in autumn, but the city should prepare for a fresh round in spring, Barbero said.
Rower Romanini said that, for now, locals will just have to learn to live with it—"and show more respect for the river."
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© 2026 AFP
Citation: Algae fed by farm waste carpet Italy's warm River Po (2026, July 16) retrieved 17 July 2026 from https://phys.org/news/2026-07-algae-fed-farm-carpet-italy.html
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