By ScienceDaily, August 23, 2012
The worst drought to hit the United States in at least 50 years does have one benefit: it has created the smallest "dead zone" in the Gulf of Mexico in years, says a Texas A&M University researcher who has just returned from gulf waters.
The "Dead Zone" in 2005; image credit: NASA |
The worst drought to hit the United States in at least 50 years does have one benefit: it has created the smallest "dead zone" in the Gulf of Mexico in years, says a Texas A&M University researcher who has just returned from gulf waters.
Oceanography
professor Steve DiMarco, one of the world's leading authorities on the dead
zone, says he and other Texas A&M researchers and graduate students
analyzed the Gulf Aug. 15-21 and covered more than 1,200 miles of cruise track,
from Texas to Louisiana. The team found no hypoxia off the Texas coast while
only finding hypoxia near the Mississippi River delta on the Louisiana coast.
"We had to
really hunt to find any hypoxia at all and Texas had none," he explains.
"The most
severe hypoxia levels were found near Terrabonne Bay and Barataria Bay off the
coast of southeast Louisiana.
"In all, we
found about 1,580 square miles of hypoxia compared to about 3,400 square miles
in August 2011. What has happened is that the drought has caused very little
fresh-water runoff and nutrient load into the Gulf, and that means a smaller
region for marine life to be impacted."
DiMarco has made 27
research trips to investigate the dead zone since 2003.
DiMarco says the
size of the dead zone off coastal Louisiana has been routinely monitored for
about 25 years. Previous research has also shown that nitrogen levels in the
Gulf related to human activities have tripled over the past 50 years. During
the past five years, the dead zone has averaged about 5,700 square miles and
has reached as high as 9,400 square miles.
Hypoxia is when
oxygen levels in seawater drop to dangerously low levels, defined as
concentrations less than 2 milligrams per liter, and persistent hypoxia can
potentially result in fish kills and harm marine life, thereby creating a
"dead zone" of life in that particular area.
The Mississippi is
the largest river in the United States, draining 40 percent of the land area of
the country. It also accounts for almost 90 percent of the freshwater runoff
into the Gulf of Mexico.
"These
findings confirm what we found in a trip to the Gulf back in June, and also
what other researchers in Louisiana have discovered, so there is general
agreement that the dead zone this year is a very, very small one.
"But the
situation could certainly change by next spring," DiMarco adds.
"The
changes we see year to year are extreme. For example, last year, record
flooding of the Mississippi River and westerly winds in the Gulf led to a much
larger hypoxic area, particularly earlier in the summer. We'll just have to
wait and see what kind of rainfall is in store for the Midwest over the next
8-10 months."
Story Source:
The above story is reprinted from materials provided byTexas A&M University, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.
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