The weld-on zinc - which is about as good as can be done in that direction, barring active galvanic protection like Electro-Guard and their ilk - definitely says there's galvanic corrosion (and it should have been changed quite a bit ago; that looks like well over 50% gone. Also, hitting them with a wire brush any time you get the chance is a good idea; they can't protect your boat through an oxidized surface.) But I wouldn't hurry to blame the salt water, or change the type of zinc. I had weld-on zincs on my steel-hulled sailboat that was kept in warm, salt Florida water the year around - and these got consumed at
maybe 5% per year. The difference was that I didn't keep it in a marina; I anchored out.
I've done on the order of a couple of dozen galvanic surveys on boats over the years, and here's a plain fact: I have only seen
one marina, in all that time, that
didn't have ridiculous amounts of electrical leakage into the water. Some of them, you couldn't put your hand in the water without getting a shock. And guess what that grounds through, on your vessel - especially if you're plugged in? In fact, one of the first ones I ever saw at a little marina in the Chesapeake Bay, was a shaft that had been brand new the month before eaten half-through - and the wood around it literally
bubbling with white foam. Galvanic isolators can help, but they're mostly going to protect you from anything that's mis-wired on your boat eating your metal; the currents in the water are what's really going to zap you.
If you're in a marina, it would be a really good idea to test the water there first, and to handle the issue with the marina owner (tip: the cost of a survey is usually higher than the cost of a reference electrode, which run ~$100 - and that, plus a regular multimeter, is all you need to do surveys of your own.) Meanwhile, replace that zinc and don't be shy about welding on three or four in its place. I had 4 10-pounders on my hull, which was about 25% more than I calculated I needed for my 36-foot steel ketch, but this was a place where I figured it's better to have more rather than less. Also, docks further away from the marina office tend to have much lower potentials, in my experience. Just sayin'.
