People walk along the beach during low tide in Gulfport, Mississippi, on Monday, May 4, 2020.
- STAFF PHOTO BY CHRIS GRANGER
Seven beaches along Mississippi's Gulf Coast are under advisories due to higher-than-normal bacteria levels.
- Courtesy of the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality
1 min to read
Sun Herald
The bacteria keep turning up on beaches.
Again on Thursday, the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality said routine tests had discovered it in three new places: Pass Christian West Beach, Gulfport Harbor Beach and Gulfport Central Beach.
By Friday, Gulfport East Beach fell under an advisory, too.
The latest warnings mean eight beaches from Pass Christian to Gulfport now have higher-than-normal bacteria levels, includingPass Christian Central, Pass Christian East, Long Beach and Gulfport West Beach, which were put under advisories last month. All of them are still open.
Mississippi recommends avoiding the water during advisories, and the enduring annoyance has already appeared on more than a dozen Mississippi Coast shorelines this year.
The state tests for bacteria called Enterococcus, which lives in the intestinal tracts of some animals. Its presence can suggest bacteria from from wastewater treatment plants, septic systems or boat sewage is also in the water.
It is unclear what causes each advisory, but they often increase in warmer months and are also common after rain. Cracked septic tanks, overflowing manholes and crumbling sewer lines can prompt advisories by sending untreated wastewater into roadside ditches, where storm-water drains wash it into the Mississippi Sound.
The bacteria also comes from wildlife, including bird colonies. Advisories can even be triggered by strong winds that disturb sediment in the water, according tothe state’s beach monitoring website.
The Department of Environmental Quality says swimming during an advisory can increase the risk of illness, including infection or digestive problems. It also notes any natural body of water poses some risk to swimmers. The warnings have long frustrated some beach businesses, who say the water is fine and that the advisories hurt tourism.
The state will test all seven beaches each day until bacteria levels return to normal.
Here is a list of past advisories in 2025:
March 20: The state issued advisories for Pass Christian East Beach and Gulfport West Beach.
March 13: The state issued an advisory for Bay St. Louis Beach and Pass Christian Central Beach. A day later, it issued an advisory for Biloxi East Central Beach. Mississippi lifted the advisories at Bay St. Louis Beach and Biloxi East Central Beach on March 19.
Feb. 13: Mississippi issued an advisory in Long Beach, Pass Christian Central Beach and Bay St. Louis Beach. The advisories in Pass Christian and Bay St. Louis lifted Feb. 26.
Feb. 6: The Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality issued a water contact advisory at Gulfport West Beach. The advisory lifted Feb. 12. The agency also issued an advisory at Waveland Beach, which lifted Feb. 26.
Jan. 17: The Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality issued an advisory at Front Beach in Ocean Springs. The advisory ended Jan. 29.
The Sun Herald, based in Biloxi, covers the Mississippi Gulf Coast and is a news partner with NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune. Read more at www.sunherald.com.
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