fbpx
Wikipedia

Dead zone (ecology)

Dead zones are hypoxic (low-oxygen) areas in the world's oceans and large lakes. Hypoxia occurs when dissolved oxygen (DO) concentration falls to or below 2 mg of O2/liter.[2] When a body of water experiences hypoxic conditions, aquatic flora and fauna begin to change behavior in order to reach sections of water with higher oxygen levels. Once DO declines below 0.5 ml O2/liter in a body of water, mass mortality occurs. With such a low concentration of DO, these bodies of water fail to support the aquatic life living there.[3] Historically, many of these sites were naturally occurring. However, in the 1970s, oceanographers began noting increased instances and expanses of dead zones. These occur near inhabited coastlines, where aquatic life is most concentrated.

Red circles show the location and size of many dead zones (in 2008). Black dots show dead zones of unknown size. The size and number of marine dead zones—areas where the deep water is so low in dissolved oxygen that sea creatures cannot survive (except for some specialized bacteria)—have grown in the past half-century.[1]

Coastal regions, such as the Baltic Sea, the northern Gulf of Mexico, and the Chesapeake Bay, as well as large enclosed water bodies like Lake Erie, have been affected by deoxygenation due to eutrophication. Excess nutrients are input into these systems by rivers, ultimately from urban and agricultural runoff and exacerbated by deforestation. These nutrients lead to high productivity that produces organic material that sinks to the bottom and is respired. The respiration of that organic material uses up the oxygen and causes hypoxia or anoxia.

The UN Environment Programme reported 146 dead zones in 2004 in the world's oceans where marine life could not be supported due to depleted oxygen levels. Some of these were as small as a square kilometer (0.4 mi2), but the largest dead zone covered 70,000 square kilometers (27,000 mi2). A 2008 study counted 405 dead zones worldwide.[4][2]

Causes edit

 
Dead zones are often caused by the decay of algae during algal blooms, like this one off the coast of La Jolla, San Diego, California.
 
Climate has a significant impact on the growth and decline of ecological dead zones. During spring months, as rainfall increases, more nutrient-rich water flows down the mouth of the Mississippi River.[5] At the same time, as sunlight increases during the spring, algal growth in the dead zones increases dramatically. In fall months, tropical storms begin to enter the Gulf of Mexico and break up the dead zones, and the cycle repeats again in the spring.

Aquatic and marine dead zones can be caused by an increase in nutrients (particularly nitrogen and phosphorus) in the water, known as eutrophication. These nutrients are the fundamental building blocks of single-celled, plant-like organisms that live in the water column, and whose growth is limited in part by the availability of these materials. With more available nutrients, single-celled aquatic organisms (such as algae and cyanobacteria) have the resources necessary to exceed their previous growth limit and begin to multiply at an exponential rate. Exponential growth leads to rapid increases in the density of certain types of these phytoplankton, a phenomenon known as an algal bloom.[6]

Limnologist David Schindler, whose research at the Experimental Lakes Area led to the banning of harmful phosphates in detergents, warned about algal blooms and dead zones,

"The fish-killing blooms that devastated the Great Lakes in the 1960s and 1970s haven't gone away; they've moved west into an arid world in which people, industry, and agriculture are increasingly taxing the quality of what little freshwater there is to be had here....This isn't just a prairie problem. Global expansion of dead zones caused by algal blooms is rising rapidly."[7]

The major groups of algae are cyanobacteria, green algae, dinoflagellates, coccolithophores and diatom algae. An increase in the input of nitrogen and phosphorus generally causes cyanobacteria to bloom. Other algae are consumed and thus do not accumulate to the same extent as cyanobacteria.[citation needed] Cyanobacteria are not good food for zooplankton and fish and hence accumulate in water, die, and then decompose. The bacterial degradation of their biomass consumes the oxygen in the water, thereby creating the state of hypoxia.[citation needed]

Dead zones can be caused by natural and by anthropogenic factors. Natural causes include coastal upwelling, changes in wind, and water circulation patterns. Other environmental factors that determine the occurrence or intensity of a dead zone include long water residence times, high temperatures, and high levels of sunlight penetration through the water column.[8]

Additionally, natural oceanographic phenomena can cause deoxygenation of parts of the water column. For example, enclosed bodies of water, such as fjords or the Black Sea, have shallow sills at their entrances,[9] causing water to be trapped there for a long time.[citation needed] The eastern tropical Pacific Ocean and northern Indian Ocean have lowered oxygen concentrations which are thought to be in regions where there is minimal circulation to replace the oxygen that is consumed.[10] These areas are also known as oxygen minimum zones (OMZ). In many cases, OMZs are permanent or semi-permanent areas.[citation needed]

Remains of organisms found within sediment layers near the mouth of the Mississippi River indicate four hypoxic events before the advent of synthetic fertilizer. In these sediment layers, anoxia-tolerant species are the most prevalent remains found. The periods indicated by the sediment record correspond to historic records of high river flow recorded by instruments at Vicksburg, Mississippi.[citation needed]

Changes in ocean circulation triggered by ongoing climate change could also add or magnify other causes of oxygen reductions in the ocean.[11]

Anthropogenic causes include use of chemical fertilizers and their subsequent presence in water runoff and groundwater, direct sewage discharge into rivers and lakes, and nutrient discharge into groundwater from large, accumulated quantities of animal waste. Use of chemical fertilizers is considered the major human-related cause of dead zones around the world. However, runoff from sewage, urban land use, and fertilizers can also contribute to eutrophication.[12]

In August 2017, a report suggested that the US meat industry and agroeconomic system are predominantly responsible for the largest-ever dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico.[13] Soil runoff and leached nitrate, exacerbated by agricultural land management and tillage practices as well as manure and synthetic fertilizer usage, contaminated water from the Heartland to the Gulf of Mexico. A large portion of the plant matter by-products from crops grown in this region are used as major feed components in the production of meat animals for agribusiness companies, like Tyson and Smithfield Foods.[14] Over 86% of the livestock feed is inedible for humans.[15]

Notable dead zones in the United States include the northern Gulf of Mexico region,[5] surrounding the outfall of the Mississippi River, the coastal regions of the Pacific Northwest, and the Elizabeth River in Virginia Beach, all of which have been shown to be recurring events over the last several years. Around the world, dead zones have developed in continental seas, such as the Baltic Sea, Kattegat, Black Sea, Gulf of Mexico, and East China Sea, all of which are major fishery areas.[2]

Types edit

Dead zones can be classified by type, and are identified by the length of their occurrence:[16]

  • Permanent dead zones are deep water occurrences that rarely exceed 2 milligrams per liter.
  • Temporary dead zones are short lived dead zones lasting hours or days.
  • Seasonal dead zones are annually occurring, typically in warm months of summer and autumn.
  • Diel cycling hypoxia is a specific seasonal dead zone that only becomes hypoxic during the night

The type of dead zone can, in some ways, be categorized by the time required for the water to return to full health. This time frame depends on the intensity of eutrophication and level of oxygen depletion. A water body that sinks to anoxic conditions and experiences extreme reduction in community diversity will have to travel a much longer path to return to full health. A water body that only experiences mild hypoxia and maintains community diversity and maturity will require a much shorter path length to return to full health.[2]

Effects edit

 
Underwater video frame of the sea floor in the western Baltic covered with dead or dying crabs, fish and clams killed by oxygen depletion

The most notable effects of eutrophication are vegetal blooms, sometimes toxic, loss of biodiversity and anoxia, which can lead to the massive death of aquatic organisms.[8]

Due to the hypoxic conditions present in dead zones, marine life within these areas tends to be scarce. Most fish and motile organisms tend to emigrate out of the zone as oxygen concentrations fall, and benthic populations may experience severe losses when oxygen concentrations are below 0.5 mg l−1 O2.[17] In severe anoxic conditions, microbial life may experience dramatic shifts in community identity as well, resulting in an increased abundance of anaerobic organisms as aerobic microbes decrease in number and switch energy sources for oxidation such as nitrate, sulfate, or iron reduction. Sulfur reduction is a particular concern as Hydrogen sulfide is toxic and stresses most organisms within the zone further, exacerbating mortality risks.[18]

Low oxygen levels can have severe effects on survivability of organisms inside the area while above lethal anoxic conditions. Studies conducted along the Gulf Coast of North America have shown hypoxic conditions lead to reduction of reproductive rates and growth rates in a variety of organisms including fish and benthic invertebrates. Organisms able to leave the area typically do so when oxygen concentrations decrease to less than 2 mg l−1.[17] At these oxygen concentrations and below, organisms that survive inside the oxygen deficient environment and are unable to escape the area will often exhibit progressively worsening stress behavior and die. Surviving organisms tolerant of hypoxic conditions often exhibit physiological adaptations appropriate for persisting within hypoxic environments. Examples of such adaptations include increased efficiency of oxygen intake and use, lowering required amount of oxygen intake through reduced growth rates or dormancy, and increasing the usage of anaerobic metabolic pathways.[17]

Community composition in benthic communities is dramatically disrupted by periodic oxygen depletion events, such as those of Seasonal Dead Zones and occurring as a result of Diel Cycles. The longterm effects of such hypoxic conditions result in a shift in communities, most commonly manifest as a decrease in species diversity through mass mortality events. Reestablishment of benthic communities depend upon composition of adjacent communities for larval recruitment.[17] This results in a shift towards faster establishing colonizers with shorter and more opportunistic life strategies, potentially disrupting historic benthic compositions.[citation needed]

Fisheries edit

The influence of dead zones on fisheries and other marine commercial activities varies by the length of occurrence and location. Dead zones are often accompanied by a decrease in biodiversity and collapse in benthic populations, lowering the diversity of yield in commercial fishing operations, but in cases of eutrophication-related dead zone formations, the increase in nutrient availability can lead to temporary rises in select yields among pelagic populations, such as anchovies.[17] However, studies estimate that the increased production in the surrounding areas do not offset the net decrease in productivity resulting from the dead zone. For instance, an estimated 17,000 MT of carbon in the form of prey for fisheries has been lost as a result of Dead Zones in the Gulf of Mexico.[2] Additionally, many stressors in fisheries are worsened by hypoxic conditions. Indirect factors such as increased success by invasive species and increased pandemic intensity in stressed species such as oysters both lead to losses in revenue and ecological stability in affected regions.[19]

Coral reefs edit

 
In many places, coral reefs are experiencing worse hypoxia which can lead to bleaching and mass coral die-offs.

There has been a severe increase in mass mortality events associated with low oxygen causing mass hypoxia with the majority having been in the last 2 decades. The rise in water temperature leads to an increase in oxygen demand and the increase for ocean deoxygenation which causes these large coral reef dead zones. For many coral reefs, the response to this hypoxia is very dependent on the magnitude and duration of the deoxygenation. The symptoms can be anywhere from reduced photosynthesis and calcification to bleaching. Hypoxia can have indirect effects like the abundance of algae and spread of coral diseases in the ecosystems. While coral is unable to handle such low levels of oxygen, algae is quite tolerant. Because of this, in interaction zones between algae and coral, increased hypoxia will cause more coral death and higher spread of algae. The increase mass coral dead zones is reinforced by the spread of coral diseases. Coral diseases can spread easily when there are high concentrations of sulfide and hypoxic conditions. Due to the loop of hypoxia and coral reef mortality, the fish and other marine life that inhabit the coral reefs have a change in behavioral in response to the hypoxia. Some fish will go upwards to find more oxygenated water, and some enter a phase of metabolic and ventilatory depression. Invertebrates migrate out of their homes to the surface of substratum or move to the tips of arborescent coral colonies.[20][21][22]

Around six million people, the majority who live in developing countries, depend on coral reef fisheries. These mass die-offs due to extreme hypoxic events can have severe impacts on reef fish populations. Coral reef ecosystems offer a variety of essential ecosystem services including shoreline protection, nitrogen fixation, and waste assimilation, and tourism opportunities. The continued decline of oxygen in oceans on coral reefs is concerning because it takes many years (decades) to repair and regrow corals.[20]

Jellyfish blooms edit

Despite most other life forms being killed by the lack of oxygen, jellyfish can thrive and are sometimes present in dead zones in vast numbers. Jellyfish blooms produce large quantities of mucus, leading to major changes in food webs in the ocean since few organisms feed on them. The organic carbon in mucus is metabolized by bacteria which return it to the atmosphere in the form of carbon dioxide in what has been termed a "jelly carbon shunt".[23] The potential worsening of jellyfish blooms as a result of human activities has driven new research into the influence of dead zones on jelly populations. The primary concern is the potential for dead zones to serve as breeding grounds for jelly populations as a result of the hypoxic conditions driving away competition for resources and common predators of jellyfish.[24] The increased population of jellyfish could have high commercial costs with loss of fisheries, destruction and contamination of trawling nets and fishing vessels, and lowered tourism revenue in coastal systems.[24]

Seagrass beds edit

Globally, seagrass has been declining rapidly. It is estimated that 21% of the 71 known seagrass species have decreasing population trends and 11% of those species have been designated as threatened on the ICUN Red List. Hypoxia that leads to eutrophication caused form ocean deoxygenation is one of the main underlying factors of these die-offs. Eutrophication causes enhanced nutrient enrichment which can result in seagrass productivity, but with continual nutrient enrichment in seagrass meadows, it can cause excessive growth of microalgae, epiphytes and phytoplankton resulting in hypoxic conditions.[20]

Seagrass is both a source and a sink for oxygen in the surrounding water column and sediments. At night, the inner part of seagrass oxygen pressure is linearly related to the oxygen concentration in the water column, so low water column oxygen concentrations often result in hypoxic seagrass tissues, which can eventually kill off the seagrass. Normally, seagrass sediments must supply oxygen to the below-ground tissue through either photosynthesis or by diffusing oxygen from the water column through leaves to rhizomes and roots. However, with the change in seagrass oxygen balances, it can often result in hypoxic seagrass tissues. Seagrass exposed to this hypoxic water column show increased respiration, reduced rates of photosynthesis, smaller leaves, and reduced number of leaves per shoot. This causes insufficient supply of oxygen to the belowground tissues for aerobic respiration, so seagrass must rely on the less-efficient anaerobic respiration. Seagrass die-offs create a positive feedback loop in which the mortality events cause more death as higher oxygen demands are created when dead plant material decomposes.[25]

Because hypoxia increases the invasion of sulfides in seagrass, this negatively affects seagrass through photosynthesis, metabolism and growth. Generally, seagrass is able to combat the sulfides by supplying enough oxygen to the roots. However, deoxygenation causes the seagrass to be unable to supply this oxygen, thus killing it off.[25]

Deoxygenation reduces the diversity of organisms inhabiting seagrass beds by eliminating species that cannot tolerate the low oxygen conditions. Indirectly, the loss and degradation of seagrass threatens numerous species that rely on seagrass for either shelter or food. The loss of seagrass also effects the physical characteristics and resilience of seagrass ecosystems. Seagrass beds provide nursery grounds and habitat to many harvested commercial, recreational, and subsistence fish and shellfish. In many tropical regions, local people are dependent on seagrass associated fisheries as a source of food and income.[25]

Seagrass also provides many ecosystem services including water purification, coastal protection, erosion control, sequestration and delivery of trophic subsidies to adjacent marine and terrestrial habitats. Continued deoxygenation causes the effects of hypoxia to be compounded by climate change which will increase the decline in seagrass populations.[26][25]

Mangrove forests edit

Compared to seagrass beds and coral reefs, hypoxia is more common on a regular basis in mangrove ecosystems, though ocean deoxygenation is compounding the negative effects by anthropogenic nutrient inputs and land use modification.[20]

Like seagrass, mangrove trees transport oxygen to roots of rhizomes, reduce sulfide concentrations, and alter microbial communities. Dissolved oxygen is more readily consumed in the interior of the mangrove forest. Anthropogenic inputs may push the limits of survival in many mangrove microhabitats. For example, shrimp ponds constructed in mangrove forests are considered the greatest anthropogenic threat to mangrove ecosystems. These shrimp ponds reduce estuary circulation and water quality which leads to the promotion of diel-cycling hypoxia. When the quality of the water degrades, the shrimp ponds are quickly abandoned leaving massive amounts of wastewater. This is a major source of water pollution that promotes ocean deoxygenation in the adjacent habitats.[20][27]

Due to these frequent hypoxic conditions, the water does not provide habitats to fish. When exposed to extreme hypoxia, ecosystem function can completely collapse. Extreme deoxygenation will affect the local fish populations, which are an essential food source. The environmental costs of shrimp farms in the mangrove forests grossly outweigh their economic benefits. Cessation of shrimp production and restoration of these areas and reduce eutrophication and anthropogenic hypoxia.[20]

Locations edit

In the 1970s, marine dead zones were first noted in settled areas where intensive economic use stimulated scientific scrutiny: in the U.S. East Coast's Chesapeake Bay, in Scandinavia's strait called the Kattegat, which is the mouth of the Baltic Sea and in other important Baltic Sea fishing grounds, in the Black Sea, and in the northern Adriatic.[28]

Other marine dead zones have appeared in coastal waters of South America, China, Japan, and New Zealand. A 2008 study counted 405 dead zones worldwide.[4][2]

Baltic Sea edit

Researchers from Baltic Nest Institute published in one of PNAS issues reports that the dead zones in the Baltic Sea have grown from approximately 5,000 km2 to more than 60,000 km2 in recent years.[citation needed]

Some of the causes behind the elevated increase of dead zones can be attributed to the use of fertilizers, large animal farms, the burning of fossil fuels, and effluents from municipal wastewater treatment plants.[29]

With its massive size, the Baltic Sea is best analyzed in sub-areas rather than as a whole. In a paper published in 2004, researchers specifically divided the Baltic Sea into 9 sub-areas, each having its own specific characteristics.[30] The 9 sub-areas are discerned as follows: Gulf of Bothnia, Archipelago region, Gulf of Finland, Gulf of Riga, Gulf of Gdansk, Swedish East-coast, Central Baltic, Belt Sea region, and Kattegat.[30] Each sub-area has responded differently to nutrient additions and eutrophication; however, there are a few general patterns and measures for the Baltic Sea as a whole.[30] As the researchers Rönnberg and Bonsdorff state,

“Irrespective of the area-specific effects of the increased loads of nutrients to the Baltic Sea, the sources are more or less similar in the whole region. The extent and the severity of the discharges may differ, however. As is seen in e.g. HELCOM (1996) and Rönnberg (2001), the major sources in the input of nutrients are derived from agriculture, industry, municipal sewage and transports. Nitrogen emissions in form of atmospheric depositions are also important, as well as local point sources, such as aquaculture and leakage from forestry.”[30]

In general, each area of the Baltic Sea is experiencing similar anthropogenic effects. As Rönnberg and Bonsdorff state, "Eutrophication is a serious problem in the Baltic Sea area."[30] However, when it comes to implementation of water revival programs, each area likely will need to be handled on a local level.[citation needed]

Chesapeake Bay edit

 
Dissolved oxygen levels required by various species in Chesapeake Bay

As reported by the National Geographic "The Chesapeake Bay, on the East Coast of the United States, has one of the first dead zones ever identified, in the 1970s. The Chesapeake's high levels of nitrogen are caused by two factors: urbanization and agriculture. The western part of the bay is full of factories and urban centers that emit nitrogen into the air. Atmospheric nitrogen accounts for about a third of the nitrogen that enters the bay. The eastern part of the bay is a center of poultry farming, which produces large amounts of manure."[31]

The National Geographic further stated "Since 1967, the Chesapeake Bay Foundation has led a number of programs that aim to improve the bay's water quality and curb pollution runoff. The Chesapeake still has a dead zone, whose size varies with the season and weather."[31]

Elizabeth River, Virginia edit

The Elizabeth River estuary is important for Norfolk, Virginia, Chesapeake, Virginia, Virginia Beach, Virginia and Portsmouth, Virginia. It has been polluted by nitrogen and phosphorus, but also toxic deposits from the shipbuilding industry, the military, the world's largest coal export facility, refineries, loading docks, container-repair facilities and others, so fish had been "offlimits since the 1920s". In 1993, a group formed to clean it up, adopting the mummichog as a mascot, and has removed thousands of tons of contaminated sediment. In 2006, a 35-acre biological dead zone called Money Point was dredged out, and this let fish return and the wetland recover.[32]

Lake Erie edit

A seasonal dead zone exists in the central part of Lake Erie from east of Point Pelee to Long Point and stretches to shores in Canada and the United States. Between the months of July and October the dead zone has the ability to grow to the size of 10,000 square kilometers.[33] Lake Erie has an excess of phosphorus due to agricultural runoff that quickens the growth of algae which then contributes to hypoxic conditions.[34] The superabundance of phosphorus in the lake has been linked to nonpoint source pollution such as urban and agricultural runoff as well as point source pollution that includes sewage and wastewater treatment plants.[35] The zone was first noticed in the 1960s amid the peak of eutrophication occurring in the lake.[36] After public concern increased, Canada and the US launched efforts to reduce runoff pollution into the lake in the 1970s as means to reverse the dead zone growth.[36] Scientists in 2018 stated that phosphorus runoff would have to further decrease by 40% to avoid the emergence of the dead zones in the area.[37] The commercial and recreational fishing industry have been significantly impacted by the hypoxic zone.[33] In 2021, the low-oxygenated waters caused a mass-kill event of freshwater drum fish species (also known as sheepshead fish).[38] Water from the lake is also used for human drinking.[39] Water from the lake has been said to acquire a pervasive odor and discoloration when the dead zone is active in the late summer months.[40]

Lower St. Lawrence Estuary edit

A dead zone exists in the Lower St. Lawrence River area from east the Saguenay River to east of Baie Comeau, greatest at depths over 275 metres (902 ft) and noticed since the 1930s.[41] The main concern for Canadian scientists is the impact on fish found in the area.[citation needed]

Oregon edit

There is a hypoxic zone covers the coasts of Oregon and Washington[42] that reached peak size in 2006 at an area of over 1,158 square miles.[43] Strong surface winds between April and September cause frequent upwelling that results in an increase of algae blooms, rendering the hypoxia a seasonal occurrence.[44] The upwelling has contributed to lower temperatures within the zone.[45] The dead zone has resulted in sea organisms such as crabs and fish relocating and an interference of commercial fishing.[42] Organisms that cannot relocate have been found to suffocate, leaving them unable to be used by fishermen.[46] In 2009, one scientist described "thousands and thousands" of suffocated, crabs, worms, and sea stars along the seafloor of the hypoxic zone.[47] In 2021, 1.9 million dollars were put into monitoring and continuing to study the hypoxic conditions in the area that the dead zone occurs in.[46]

Gulf of Mexico 'dead zone' edit

 
Dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico

The area of temporary hypoxic bottom water that occurs most summers off the coast of Louisiana in the Gulf of Mexico[48] is the largest recurring hypoxic zone in the United States.[49] It occurs only during the summer months of the year due to summer warming, regional circulation, wind mixing and high freshwater discharge.[50] The Mississippi River, which is the drainage area for 41% of the continental United States, dumps high-nutrient runoff such as nitrates and phosphorus into the Gulf of Mexico. According to a 2009 fact sheet created by NOAA, "seventy percent of nutrient loads that cause hypoxia are a result of this vast drainage basin".[51] which includes the heart of U.S. agribusiness, the Midwest. The discharge of treated sewage from urban areas (pop. c 12 million in 2009) combined with agricultural runoff deliver c. 1.7 million tons of phosphorus and nitrogen into the Gulf of Mexico every year.[51] Nitrogen is indeed needed to increase crop yields, but plants are inefficient at taking it up, and often more fertilizers are used than plants actually need. Therefore, only a percentage of applied nitrogen ends up in the crops; and in some areas that number is less than 20%.[52] Even though Iowa occupies less than 5% of the Mississippi River drainage basin, average annual nitrate discharge from surface water in Iowa is about 204,000 to 222,000 metric tonnes, or 25% of all the nitrate which the Mississippi River delivers to the Gulf of Mexico.[53] Export from the Raccoon River Watershed is among the highest in the United States with annual yields at 26.1 kg/ha/year which ranked as the highest loss of nitrate out of 42 Mississippi subwatersheds evaluated for a Gulf of Mexico hypoxia report.[54][55] In 2012, Iowa introduced the Iowa Nutrient Reduction Strategy, which "is a science and technology-based framework to assess and reduce nutrients to Iowa waters and the Gulf of Mexico. It is designed to direct efforts to reduce nutrients in surface water from both point and nonpoint sources in a scientific, reasonable and cost effective manner."[56] The strategy continues to evolve, using voluntary methods to reduce Iowa's negative contributions through outreach, research, and implementation of nutrient holding practices. In order to help reduce agricultural runoff into the Mississippi Basin, Minnesota passed MN Statute 103F.48 in 2015, also known as the "Buffer Law", which was designed to implement mandatory riparian buffers between farmland and public waterways across the State of Minnesota. The Minnesota Board of Water and Soil Resources (BWSR) issued a January 2019 report stating that compliance with the 'Buffer Law' has reached 99%.[citation needed]

Size edit

The area of hypoxic bottom water that occurs for several weeks each summer in the Gulf of Mexico has been mapped most years from 1985 through 2017. The size varies annually from a record high in 2017 when it encompassed more than 22,730 square kilometers (8,776 square miles) to a record low in 1988 of 39 square kilometers (15 square miles).[57][48][58] The 2015 dead zone measured 16,760 square kilometers (6,474 square miles).[59]Nancy Rabalais of the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium in Cocodrie, Louisiana predicted the dead zone or hypoxic zone in 2012 will cover an area of 17,353 square kilometers (6,700 square miles) which is larger than Connecticut; however, when the measurements were completed, the area of hypoxic bottom water in 2012 only totaled 7,480 square kilometers. The models using the nitrogen flux from the Mississippi River to predict the "dead zone" areas have been criticized for being systematically high from 2006 to 2014, having predicted record areas in 2007, 2008, 2009, 2011, and 2013 that were never realized.[60]

In late summer 1988 the dead zone disappeared as the great drought caused the flow of Mississippi to fall to its lowest level since 1933. During times of heavy flooding in the Mississippi River Basin, as in 1993, "the "dead zone" dramatically increased in size, approximately 5,000 km (3,107 mi) larger than the previous year".[61]

Economic impact edit

Some assert that the dead zone threatens lucrative commercial and recreational fisheries in the Gulf of Mexico. "In 2009, the dockside value of commercial fisheries in the Gulf was $629 million. Nearly three million recreational fishers further contributed about $10 billion to the Gulf economy, taking 22 million fishing trips."[62] Scientists are not in universal agreement that nutrient loading has a negative impact on fisheries. Grimes makes a case that nutrient loading enhances the fisheries in the Gulf of Mexico.[63] Courtney et al. hypothesize, that nutrient loading may have contributed to the increases in red snapper in the northern and western Gulf of Mexico.[64]

In 2017, Tulane University offered a $1 million challenge grant for growing crops with less fertilizer.[65]

History edit

Shrimp trawlers first reported a 'dead zone' in the Gulf of Mexico in 1950, but it was not until 1970 when the size of the hypoxic zone had increased that scientists began to investigate.[66]

After 1950, the conversion of forests and wetlands for agricultural and urban developments accelerated. "Missouri River Basin has had hundreds of thousands of acres of forests and wetlands (66,000,000 acres) replaced with agriculture activity [. . .] In the Lower Mississippi one-third of the valley's forests were converted to agriculture between 1950 and 1976."[66]

In July 2007, a dead zone was discovered off the coast of Texas where the Brazos River empties into the Gulf.[67]

Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 edit

The Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 calls for the production of 36 billion US gallons (140,000,000 m3) of renewable fuels by 2022, including 15 billion US gallons (57,000,000 m3) of corn-based ethanol, a tripling of current production that would require a similar increase in corn production.[68] Unfortunately, the plan poses a new problem; the increase in demand for corn production results in a proportional increase in nitrogen runoff. Although nitrogen, which makes up 78% of the Earth's atmosphere, is an inert gas, it has more reactive forms, two of which (nitrate and ammonia) are used to make fertilizer.[69]

According to Fred Below, a professor of crop physiology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, corn requires more nitrogen-based fertilizer because it produces a higher grain per unit area than other crops and, unlike other crops, corn is completely dependent on available nitrogen in soil. The results, reported 18 March 2008 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, showed that scaling up corn production to meet the 15-billion-US-gallon (57,000,000 m3) goal would increase nitrogen loading in the Dead Zone by 10–18%. This would boost nitrogen levels to twice the level recommended by the Mississippi Basin/Gulf of Mexico Water Nutrient Task Force (Mississippi River Watershed Conservation Programs), a coalition of federal, state, and tribal agencies that have monitored the dead zone since 1997. The task force says a 30% reduction of nitrogen runoff is needed if the dead zone is to shrink.[68]

Reversal edit

The recovery of benthic communities is primarily dependent upon the length and severity of hypoxic conditions inside the hypoxic zone. Less severe conditions and temporary depletion of oxygen allow rapid recovery of benthic communities in the area due to reestablishment by benthic larvae from adjacent areas, with longer conditions of hypoxia and more severe oxygen depletion leading to longer reestablishment periods.[2] Recovery also depends upon stratification levels within the area, so heavily stratified areas in warmer waters are less likely to recover from anoxic or hypoxic conditions in addition to being more susceptible to eutrophication driven hypoxia.[2] The difference in recovery ability and susceptibility to hypoxia in stratified marine environments is expected to complicate recovery efforts of dead zones in the future as ocean warming continues.[citation needed]

Small scale hypoxic systems with rich surrounding communities are the most likely to recover after nutrient influxes leading to eutrophication stop. However, depending on the extent of damage and characteristics of the zone, large scale hypoxic condition could also potentially recover after a period of a decade. For example, the Black Sea dead zone, previously the largest in the world, largely disappeared between 1991 and 2001 after fertilizers became too costly to use following the collapse of the Soviet Union and the demise of centrally planned economies in Eastern and Central Europe. Fishing has again become a major economic activity in the region.[70]

While the Black Sea "cleanup" was largely unintentional and involved a drop in hard-to-control fertilizer usage, the U.N. has advocated other cleanups by reducing large industrial emissions.[70] From 1985 to 2000, the North Sea dead zone had nitrogen reduced by 37% when policy efforts by countries on the Rhine River reduced sewage and industrial emissions of nitrogen into the water. Other cleanups have taken place along the Hudson River[71] and San Francisco Bay.[4]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Aquatic Dead Zones". Nasa Earth Observatory. 17 July 2010. Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Diaz, R. J.; Rosenberg, R. (2008-08-15). "Spreading Dead Zones and Consequences for Marine Ecosystems". Science. 321 (5891): 926–929. Bibcode:2008Sci...321..926D. doi:10.1126/science.1156401. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 18703733. S2CID 32818786.
  3. ^ "NOAA: Gulf of Mexico 'dead zone' predictions feature uncertainty". National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). June 21, 2012. Retrieved June 23, 2012.
  4. ^ a b c Perlman, David (15 August 2008). "Scientists alarmed by ocean dead-zone growth". SFGate.
  5. ^ a b "Blooming horrible: Nutrient pollution is a growing problem all along the Mississippi". The Economist. 2012-06-23. Retrieved June 23, 2012.
  6. ^ Gough, Rachel; Holliman, Peter J.; Cooke, Gavan M.; Freeman, Christopher (2015-09-01). "Characterisation of algogenic organic matter during an algal bloom and its implications for trihalomethane formation". Sustainability of Water Quality and Ecology. 6: 11–19. doi:10.1016/j.swaqe.2014.12.008. ISSN 2212-6139. S2CID 40921462.
  7. ^ David W. Schindler; John R. Vallentyne (2008). The Algal Bowl: Overfertilization of the World's Freshwaters and Estuaries. Edmonton, Alberta: University of Alberta Press. ISBN 978-0888644848.
  8. ^ a b Le Moal, Morgane, Gascuel-Odoux, Chantal, Ménesguen, Alain, Souchon, Yves, Étrillard, Levain, Alix, … Pinay, Gilles (2019). Eutrophication: A new wine in an old bottle? Elsevier, Science of the Total Environment 651:1–11.
  9. ^ Gregg, M. C., and E. O¨ zsoy (2002), Flow, water mass changes, and hydraulics in the Bosporus, J. Geophys. Res., 107(C3), 3016, doi:10.1029/2000JC000485
  10. ^ Pickard, G.L. and Emery, W.J. 1982. Description Physical Oceanography: An Introduction. Pergamon Press, Oxford, page 47.
  11. ^ Mora, C.; et al. (2013). "Biotic and Human Vulnerability to Projected Changes in Ocean Biogeochemistry over the 21st Century". PLOS Biology. 11 (10): e1001682. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1001682. PMC 3797030. PMID 24143135.
  12. ^ Corn boom could expand 'dead zone' in Gulf NBC News.msn.com
  13. ^ Milman, Oliver (2017-08-01). "Meat industry blamed for largest-ever 'dead zone' in Gulf of Mexico". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2017-08-04.
  14. ^ von Reusner, Lucia (August 1, 2017). "Mystery Meat II: The Industry Behind the Quiet Destruction of the American Heartland" (PDF). Mighty Earth. Retrieved August 4, 2017.
  15. ^ "FAO sets the record straight–86% of livestock feed is inedible by humans".
  16. ^ Helmenstine, Anne Marie (May 10, 2018). "What You Need to Know About Dead Zones in the Ocean". ThoughtCo.
  17. ^ a b c d e Rabalais, Nancy N.; Turner, R. Eugene; Wiseman, William J. (2002). "Gulf of Mexico Hypoxia, A.K.A. "The Dead Zone"". Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics. 33 (1): 235–263. doi:10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.33.010802.150513. ISSN 0066-4162.
  18. ^ Diaz, Robert; Rosenberg, Rutger (1995-01-01). "Marine benthic hypoxia: A review of its ecological effects and the behavioural response of benthic macrofauna". Oceanography and Marine Biology: An Annual Review. 33: 245–303.
  19. ^ Anderson, R. S.; Brubacher, L. L.; Calvo, L. Ragone; Unger, M. A.; Burreson, E. M. (1998). "Effects of tributyltin and hypoxia on the progression of Perkinsus marinus infections and host defence mechanisms in oyster, Crassostrea virginica (Gmelin)". Journal of Fish Diseases. 21 (5): 371–380. Bibcode:1998JFDis..21..371A. doi:10.1046/j.1365-2761.1998.00128.x. ISSN 0140-7775.
  20. ^ a b c d e f Laffoley, D. & Baxter, J.M. (eds.) (2019). Ocean deoxygenation: Everyone’s problem – Causes, impacts, consequences and solutions. IUCN, Switzerland.
  21. ^ Anthony, KRN; et al. (2008). "Ocean acidification causes bleaching and productivity loss in coral reef builders". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 105 (45): 17442–17446. Bibcode:2008PNAS..10517442A. doi:10.1073/pnas.0804478105. PMC 2580748. PMID 18988740.
  22. ^ Vanwonterghem, I. and Webster, N.S. (2020) "Coral reef microorganisms in a changing climate". Iscience, 23(4). doi:10.1016/j.isci.2020.100972.
  23. ^ Yong, Ed (6 June 2011). . Discover Magazine. Archived from the original on 6 November 2018. Retrieved 4 October 2018.
  24. ^ a b Richardson, Anthony J.; Bakun, Andrew; Hays, Graeme C.; Gibbons, Mark J. (2009-06-01). "The jellyfish joyride: causes, consequences and management responses to a more gelatinous future". Trends in Ecology & Evolution. 24 (6): 312–322. doi:10.1016/j.tree.2009.01.010. ISSN 0169-5347. PMID 19324452.
  25. ^ a b c d Laffoley, D. & Baxter, J.M. (eds.) (2019). Ocean deoxygenation: Everyone’s problem – Causes, impacts, consequences and solutions. IUCN, Switzerland.
  26. ^ Waycott, M., Duarte, C.M., Carruthers, T.J., Orth, R.J., Dennison, W.C., Olyarnik, S., Calladine, A., Fourqurean, J.W., Heck, K.L., Hughes, A.R. and Kendrick, G.A. (2009) "Accelerating loss of seagrasses across the globe threatens coastal ecosystems". Proceedings of the national academy of sciences, 106(30): 12377–12381. doi:10.1073/pnas.0905620106
  27. ^ . The Nature Conservancy. Archived from the original on 2010-07-17. Retrieved 2014-01-25.
  28. ^ Karleskint; Turner; Small (2013). Introduction to Marine Biology (4 ed.). Brooks/Cole. p. 4. ISBN 978-1133364467.
  29. ^ "Dead zones have increased by more than 10-fold in the last century – Baltic Nest Institute". www.balticnest.org. 2014-04-01. Retrieved 2018-06-04.
  30. ^ a b c d e Rönnberg, Cecilia; Bonsdorff, Erik (2004). "Baltic Sea eutrophication: Area-specific ecological consequences". Hydrobiologia. 514 (1–3): 227–241. doi:10.1023/B:HYDR.0000019238.84989.7f. S2CID 21390591.
  31. ^ a b "Dead zone". 2011-01-21.
  32. ^ Kobell, Rona (July 1, 2011). . Bay Journal. Archived from the original on September 25, 2019. Retrieved September 25, 2019.
  33. ^ a b Almeida, Zoe (2015). "Lake Erie's Dead Zone" (PDF). Old Woman Creek National Estuarine Research Reserve. (PDF) from the original on 2021-07-15.
  34. ^ "Release of nutrients worsens Lake Erie's annual 'dead zone' | The University Record". record.umich.edu. Retrieved 2021-10-04.
  35. ^ Ohio Environmental Protection Agency (April 2010). "Ohio Lake Erie Phosphorus Final Report" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2010-12-27.
  36. ^ a b Conroy, Joseph D.; Boegman, Leon; Zhang, Hongyan; Edwards, William J.; Culver, David A. (2011-05-01). ""Dead Zone" dynamics in Lake Erie: the importance of weather and sampling intensity for calculated hypolimnetic oxygen depletion rates". Aquatic Sciences. 73 (2): 289–304. Bibcode:2011AqSci..73..289C. doi:10.1007/s00027-010-0176-1. ISSN 1420-9055. S2CID 24193869.
  37. ^ McCarty, James F.; Dealer, The Plain (2018-07-25). "Lake Erie dead zone threatens Cleveland drinking water". cleveland. Retrieved 2021-10-04.
  38. ^ "What's behind all of the dead fish along Lake Erie?". wkyc.com. September 4, 2021. Retrieved 2021-10-04.
  39. ^ "Lake Erie". Cleveland Water Department. 2013-05-30. Retrieved 2021-10-04.
  40. ^ Briscoe, Tony (14 November 2019). "Cleveland residents are used to their water being brown, even if they don't know why. The answer lies at the bottom of Lake Erie". chicagotribune.com. Retrieved 2021-10-04.
  41. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-06-26.
  42. ^ a b "Dead zone lingers in ocean off Oregon Coast longer than expected". kgw.com. September 10, 2021. Retrieved 2021-10-04.
  43. ^ "Dead Zones – Special Report | NSF – National Science Foundation". www.nsf.gov. Retrieved 2021-10-04.
  44. ^ "Low-oxygen waters off Washington, Oregon coasts risk becoming large 'dead zones' – Welcome to NOAA Research". research.noaa.gov. 21 July 2021. Retrieved 2021-10-04.
  45. ^ "Pacific Cooler Than Normal in Oregon Dead Zone". earthobservatory.nasa.gov. 2006-09-01. Retrieved 2021-10-04.
  46. ^ a b "Low oxygen levels off Northwest coast raise fears of marine 'dead zones'". opb. Retrieved 2021-10-04.
  47. ^ "'Dead Zone' Causing a Wave of Death Off Oregon Coast". Life at OSU. 2009-10-30. Retrieved 2021-10-04.
  48. ^ a b . U.S. Geological Survey (USGS). June 21, 2012. Archived from the original on 2016-04-11. Retrieved June 23, 2012.
  49. ^ . Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium (LUMCON). Archived from the original on June 12, 2013. Retrieved May 18, 2013.
  50. ^ Rabalais, Nancy (August 14, 2002). "Gulf of Mexico Hypoxia, A.K.A. "The Dead Zone". Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics. 33 (1): 235–263. doi:10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.33.010802.150513.
  51. ^ a b "Dead Zone: Hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico" (PDF). NOAA. 2009. Retrieved June 23, 2012.
  52. ^ Dybas, Cheryl Lyn (July 2005). "Dead Zones Spreading in World Oceans". BioScience. 55 (7): 552–557. doi:10.1641/0006-3568(2005)055[0552:DZSIWO]2.0.CO;2.
  53. ^ Schilling, Keith E.; Libra, Robert D. (2000). "The Relationship of Nitrate Concentrations in Streams to Row Crop Land Use in Iowa". Journal of Environmental Quality. 29 (6): 1846. Bibcode:2000JEnvQ..29.1846S. doi:10.2134/jeq2000.00472425002900060016x.
  54. ^ Goolsby, Donald A.; Battaglin, William A.; Aulenbach, Brent T.; Hooper, Richard P. (2001). "Nitrogen Input to the Gulf of Mexico". Journal of Environmental Quality. 30 (2): 329–36. Bibcode:2001JEnvQ..30..329G. doi:10.2134/jeq2001.302329x. PMID 11285892.
  55. ^ (PDF). United States District Court for The Northern District of Iowa, Western Division. March 16, 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 5, 2016. Retrieved March 9, 2017.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  56. ^ "Iowa Nutrient Reduction Strategy | Iowa Nutrient Reduction Strategy". www.nutrientstrategy.iastate.edu. Retrieved 2018-10-16.
  57. ^ . National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). August 3, 2017. Archived from the original on August 2, 2017. Retrieved August 3, 2017.
  58. ^ Lochhead, Carolyn (2010-07-06). "Dead zone in gulf linked to ethanol production". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2010-07-28.
  59. ^ 2015 Gulf of Mexico Hypoxic Zone Size, Mississippi River/Gulf of Mexico Hypoxia Task Force, EPA, n.d.
  60. ^ Courtney, Michael W.; Courtney, Joshua M. (2013). "Predictions Wrong Again on Dead Zone Area – Gulf of Mexico Gaining Resistance to Nutrient Loading". arXiv:1307.8064 [q-bio.QM].
  61. ^ Lisa M. Fairchild (2005). The influence of stakeholder groups on the decision-making process regarding the dead zone associated with the Mississippi river discharge (Master of Science). University of South Florida (USF). p. 14.
  62. ^ (Press release). NOAA. June 21, 2012. Archived from the original on July 29, 2020. Retrieved September 25, 2019.
  63. ^ Grimes, Churchill B. (August 2001). "Fishery Production and the Mississippi River Discharge". Fisheries. 26 (8): 17–26. doi:10.1577/1548-8446(2001)026<0017:FPATMR>2.0.CO;2.
  64. ^ Courtney, Joshua M.; Courtney, Amy C.; Courtney, Michael W. (21 June 2013). "Nutrient Loading Increases Red Snapper Production in the Gulf of Mexico". Hypotheses in the Life Sciences. 3 (1): 7–14–14. arXiv:1306.5114. Bibcode:2013arXiv1306.5114C.
  65. ^ "Adapt-N Wins Tulane Nitrogen Reduction Challenge to Reduce Dead Zones: What's Next?" (Press release). 19 December 2017.
  66. ^ a b Jennie Biewald; Annie Rossetti; Joseph Stevens; Wei Cheih Wong. The Gulf of Mexico's Hypoxic Zone (Report).
  67. ^ Cox, Tony (2007-07-23). . Bloomberg. Archived from the original on 2010-06-09. Retrieved 2010-08-03.
  68. ^ a b Potera, Carol (2008). "Fuels: Corn Ethanol Goal Revives Dead Zone Concerns". Environmental Health Perspectives. 116 (6): A242–A243. doi:10.1289/ehp.116-a242. PMC 2430248. PMID 18560496.
  69. ^ "Dead Water". Economist. May 2008.
  70. ^ a b Mee, Laurence (November 2006). "Reviving Dead Zones". Scientific American.
  71. ^ 'Dead Zones' Multiplying In World's Oceans by John Nielsen. 15 Aug 2008, Morning Edition, NPR.

References edit

  • Diaz, R. J.; Rosenberg, R. (15 August 2008). "Spreading Dead Zones and Consequences for Marine Ecosystems". Science. 321 (5891): 926–929. Bibcode:2008Sci...321..926D. doi:10.1126/science.1156401. PMID 18703733. S2CID 32818786.
  • Osterman, Lisa E.; Poore, Richard Z.; Swarzenski, Peter W.; Turner, R. Eugene (2005). "Reconstructing a 180 yr record of natural and anthropogenic induced low-oxygen conditions from Louisiana continental shelf sediments". Geology. 33 (4): 329. Bibcode:2005Geo....33..329O. doi:10.1130/G21341.1. S2CID 55361042.
  • Taylor, F. J.; Taylor, N. J.; Walsby, J. R. (1985). "A Bloom of the Planktonic Diatom,Cerataulina pelagica, off the Coast of Northeastern New Zealand in 1983, and its Contribution to an Associated Mortality of Fish and Benthic Fauna". Internationale Revue der gesamten Hydrobiologie und Hydrographie. 70 (6): 773–795. doi:10.1002/iroh.19850700602.
  • Morrisey, D.J; Gibbs, M.M; Pickmere, S.E; Cole, R.G (May 2000). "Predicting impacts and recovery of marine-farm sites in Stewart Island, New Zealand, from the Findlay–Watling model". Aquaculture. 185 (3–4): 257–271. Bibcode:2000Aquac.185..257M. doi:10.1016/s0044-8486(99)00360-9.
  • Potera, Carol (June 2008). "Fuels: Corn Ethanol Goal Revives Dead Zone Concerns". Environmental Health Perspectives. 116 (6): A242-3. doi:10.1289/ehp.116-a242. PMC 2430248. PMID 18560496.
  • Minnesota Board of Water and Soil Resources (BWSR, 2018), Alternative Practices Introduction | MN Board of Water, Soil Resources
  • Minnesota 'Buffer Law' statute: MN Statute 103F.48
  • BWSR Update, January 2019: [1] 2019-02-16 at the Wayback Machine
  • Ronnberg, C., & Bonsdorff, E. (2004, Feb). Baltic Sea eutrophication: area-specific ecological consequences [Article; Proceedings Paper]. Hydrobiologia, 514(1–3), 227–241. https://doi.org/10.1023/B:HYDR.0000019238.84989.7f
  • Le Moal, Morgane, Gascuel-Odoux, Chantal, Ménesguen, Alain, Souchon, Yves, Étrillard, Levain, Alix, ... Pinay, Gilles (2019). Eutrophication: A new wine in an old bottle? Elsevier, Science of the Total Environment 651:1–11.

Further reading edit

  • Growing 'dead zone' Confirmed by Underwater Robots in the Gulf of Oman, phys.org, April 2018
  • Hendy, Ian (August 2017), Gulf of Mexico 'dead zone' is already a disaster – but it could get worse, The Conversation
  • Bryant, Lee (April 2015), Ocean 'dead zones' are spreading – and that spells disaster for fish, The Conversation
  • David Stauth (Oregon State University), "Hypoxic "dead zone" growing off the Oregon Coast", July 31, 2006 at archive.today (archived 2013-01-29)
  • Suzie Greenhalgh and Amanda Sauer (WRI), "Awakening the 'Dead Zone': An investment for agriculture, water quality, and climate change" 2003
  • Reyes Tirado (July 2008) . Greenpeace publications. See also: . Greenpeace Canada. 2008-07-07. Archived from the original on 2010-09-08. Retrieved 2010-08-03.
  • MSNBC report on dead zones, March 29, 2004
  • Joel Achenbach, "A 'Dead Zone' in The Gulf of Mexico: Scientists Say Area That Cannot Support Some Marine Life Is Near Record Size", The Washington Post, July 31, 2008
  • Joel Achenbach, "'Dead Zones' Appear In Waters Worldwide: New Study Estimates More Than 400", The Washington Post, August 15, 2008

External links edit

  • Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium
  • UN Geo Yearbook 2003 report on nitrogen and dead zones at the Library of Congress Web Archives (archived 2005-08-02)
  • NASA on dead zones (Satellite pictures) 2015-11-23 at the Wayback Machine
  • Gulf of Mexico Dead Zone – multimedia
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 2007-10-09)
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 2010-07-11), an online nutrient trading tool developed by the World Resources Institute, designed to address issues of eutrophication. See also the website designed for Pennsylvania's nutrient trading program.

dead, zone, ecology, this, article, about, reduction, oxygen, coastal, areas, lakes, loss, oxygen, deeper, ocean, ocean, deoxygenation, other, uses, dead, zone, disambiguation, natural, anoxic, basins, anoxic, waters, dead, zones, hypoxic, oxygen, areas, world. This article is about a reduction in oxygen in coastal areas and lakes For loss of oxygen in the deeper ocean see Ocean deoxygenation For other uses see Dead zone disambiguation For the natural anoxic basins see Anoxic waters Dead zones are hypoxic low oxygen areas in the world s oceans and large lakes Hypoxia occurs when dissolved oxygen DO concentration falls to or below 2 mg of O2 liter 2 When a body of water experiences hypoxic conditions aquatic flora and fauna begin to change behavior in order to reach sections of water with higher oxygen levels Once DO declines below 0 5 ml O2 liter in a body of water mass mortality occurs With such a low concentration of DO these bodies of water fail to support the aquatic life living there 3 Historically many of these sites were naturally occurring However in the 1970s oceanographers began noting increased instances and expanses of dead zones These occur near inhabited coastlines where aquatic life is most concentrated Red circles show the location and size of many dead zones in 2008 Black dots show dead zones of unknown size The size and number of marine dead zones areas where the deep water is so low in dissolved oxygen that sea creatures cannot survive except for some specialized bacteria have grown in the past half century 1 Coastal regions such as the Baltic Sea the northern Gulf of Mexico and the Chesapeake Bay as well as large enclosed water bodies like Lake Erie have been affected by deoxygenation due to eutrophication Excess nutrients are input into these systems by rivers ultimately from urban and agricultural runoff and exacerbated by deforestation These nutrients lead to high productivity that produces organic material that sinks to the bottom and is respired The respiration of that organic material uses up the oxygen and causes hypoxia or anoxia The UN Environment Programme reported 146 dead zones in 2004 in the world s oceans where marine life could not be supported due to depleted oxygen levels Some of these were as small as a square kilometer 0 4 mi2 but the largest dead zone covered 70 000 square kilometers 27 000 mi2 A 2008 study counted 405 dead zones worldwide 4 2 Contents 1 Causes 2 Types 3 Effects 3 1 Fisheries 3 2 Coral reefs 3 3 Jellyfish blooms 3 4 Seagrass beds 3 5 Mangrove forests 4 Locations 4 1 Baltic Sea 4 2 Chesapeake Bay 4 3 Elizabeth River Virginia 4 4 Lake Erie 4 5 Lower St Lawrence Estuary 4 6 Oregon 4 7 Gulf of Mexico dead zone 4 7 1 Size 4 7 2 Economic impact 4 7 3 History 5 Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 6 Reversal 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksCauses edit nbsp Dead zones are often caused by the decay of algae during algal blooms like this one off the coast of La Jolla San Diego California nbsp Climate has a significant impact on the growth and decline of ecological dead zones During spring months as rainfall increases more nutrient rich water flows down the mouth of the Mississippi River 5 At the same time as sunlight increases during the spring algal growth in the dead zones increases dramatically In fall months tropical storms begin to enter the Gulf of Mexico and break up the dead zones and the cycle repeats again in the spring Aquatic and marine dead zones can be caused by an increase in nutrients particularly nitrogen and phosphorus in the water known as eutrophication These nutrients are the fundamental building blocks of single celled plant like organisms that live in the water column and whose growth is limited in part by the availability of these materials With more available nutrients single celled aquatic organisms such as algae and cyanobacteria have the resources necessary to exceed their previous growth limit and begin to multiply at an exponential rate Exponential growth leads to rapid increases in the density of certain types of these phytoplankton a phenomenon known as an algal bloom 6 Limnologist David Schindler whose research at the Experimental Lakes Area led to the banning of harmful phosphates in detergents warned about algal blooms and dead zones The fish killing blooms that devastated the Great Lakes in the 1960s and 1970s haven t gone away they ve moved west into an arid world in which people industry and agriculture are increasingly taxing the quality of what little freshwater there is to be had here This isn t just a prairie problem Global expansion of dead zones caused by algal blooms is rising rapidly 7 The major groups of algae are cyanobacteria green algae dinoflagellates coccolithophores and diatom algae An increase in the input of nitrogen and phosphorus generally causes cyanobacteria to bloom Other algae are consumed and thus do not accumulate to the same extent as cyanobacteria citation needed Cyanobacteria are not good food for zooplankton and fish and hence accumulate in water die and then decompose The bacterial degradation of their biomass consumes the oxygen in the water thereby creating the state of hypoxia citation needed Dead zones can be caused by natural and by anthropogenic factors Natural causes include coastal upwelling changes in wind and water circulation patterns Other environmental factors that determine the occurrence or intensity of a dead zone include long water residence times high temperatures and high levels of sunlight penetration through the water column 8 Additionally natural oceanographic phenomena can cause deoxygenation of parts of the water column For example enclosed bodies of water such as fjords or the Black Sea have shallow sills at their entrances 9 causing water to be trapped there for a long time citation needed The eastern tropical Pacific Ocean and northern Indian Ocean have lowered oxygen concentrations which are thought to be in regions where there is minimal circulation to replace the oxygen that is consumed 10 These areas are also known as oxygen minimum zones OMZ In many cases OMZs are permanent or semi permanent areas citation needed Remains of organisms found within sediment layers near the mouth of the Mississippi River indicate four hypoxic events before the advent of synthetic fertilizer In these sediment layers anoxia tolerant species are the most prevalent remains found The periods indicated by the sediment record correspond to historic records of high river flow recorded by instruments at Vicksburg Mississippi citation needed Changes in ocean circulation triggered by ongoing climate change could also add or magnify other causes of oxygen reductions in the ocean 11 Anthropogenic causes include use of chemical fertilizers and their subsequent presence in water runoff and groundwater direct sewage discharge into rivers and lakes and nutrient discharge into groundwater from large accumulated quantities of animal waste Use of chemical fertilizers is considered the major human related cause of dead zones around the world However runoff from sewage urban land use and fertilizers can also contribute to eutrophication 12 In August 2017 a report suggested that the US meat industry and agroeconomic system are predominantly responsible for the largest ever dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico 13 Soil runoff and leached nitrate exacerbated by agricultural land management and tillage practices as well as manure and synthetic fertilizer usage contaminated water from the Heartland to the Gulf of Mexico A large portion of the plant matter by products from crops grown in this region are used as major feed components in the production of meat animals for agribusiness companies like Tyson and Smithfield Foods 14 Over 86 of the livestock feed is inedible for humans 15 Notable dead zones in the United States include the northern Gulf of Mexico region 5 surrounding the outfall of the Mississippi River the coastal regions of the Pacific Northwest and the Elizabeth River in Virginia Beach all of which have been shown to be recurring events over the last several years Around the world dead zones have developed in continental seas such as the Baltic Sea Kattegat Black Sea Gulf of Mexico and East China Sea all of which are major fishery areas 2 Types editDead zones can be classified by type and are identified by the length of their occurrence 16 Permanent dead zones are deep water occurrences that rarely exceed 2 milligrams per liter Temporary dead zones are short lived dead zones lasting hours or days Seasonal dead zones are annually occurring typically in warm months of summer and autumn Diel cycling hypoxia is a specific seasonal dead zone that only becomes hypoxic during the nightThe type of dead zone can in some ways be categorized by the time required for the water to return to full health This time frame depends on the intensity of eutrophication and level of oxygen depletion A water body that sinks to anoxic conditions and experiences extreme reduction in community diversity will have to travel a much longer path to return to full health A water body that only experiences mild hypoxia and maintains community diversity and maturity will require a much shorter path length to return to full health 2 Effects edit nbsp Underwater video frame of the sea floor in the western Baltic covered with dead or dying crabs fish and clams killed by oxygen depletionThe most notable effects of eutrophication are vegetal blooms sometimes toxic loss of biodiversity and anoxia which can lead to the massive death of aquatic organisms 8 Due to the hypoxic conditions present in dead zones marine life within these areas tends to be scarce Most fish and motile organisms tend to emigrate out of the zone as oxygen concentrations fall and benthic populations may experience severe losses when oxygen concentrations are below 0 5 mg l 1 O2 17 In severe anoxic conditions microbial life may experience dramatic shifts in community identity as well resulting in an increased abundance of anaerobic organisms as aerobic microbes decrease in number and switch energy sources for oxidation such as nitrate sulfate or iron reduction Sulfur reduction is a particular concern as Hydrogen sulfide is toxic and stresses most organisms within the zone further exacerbating mortality risks 18 Low oxygen levels can have severe effects on survivability of organisms inside the area while above lethal anoxic conditions Studies conducted along the Gulf Coast of North America have shown hypoxic conditions lead to reduction of reproductive rates and growth rates in a variety of organisms including fish and benthic invertebrates Organisms able to leave the area typically do so when oxygen concentrations decrease to less than 2 mg l 1 17 At these oxygen concentrations and below organisms that survive inside the oxygen deficient environment and are unable to escape the area will often exhibit progressively worsening stress behavior and die Surviving organisms tolerant of hypoxic conditions often exhibit physiological adaptations appropriate for persisting within hypoxic environments Examples of such adaptations include increased efficiency of oxygen intake and use lowering required amount of oxygen intake through reduced growth rates or dormancy and increasing the usage of anaerobic metabolic pathways 17 Community composition in benthic communities is dramatically disrupted by periodic oxygen depletion events such as those of Seasonal Dead Zones and occurring as a result of Diel Cycles The longterm effects of such hypoxic conditions result in a shift in communities most commonly manifest as a decrease in species diversity through mass mortality events Reestablishment of benthic communities depend upon composition of adjacent communities for larval recruitment 17 This results in a shift towards faster establishing colonizers with shorter and more opportunistic life strategies potentially disrupting historic benthic compositions citation needed Fisheries edit The influence of dead zones on fisheries and other marine commercial activities varies by the length of occurrence and location Dead zones are often accompanied by a decrease in biodiversity and collapse in benthic populations lowering the diversity of yield in commercial fishing operations but in cases of eutrophication related dead zone formations the increase in nutrient availability can lead to temporary rises in select yields among pelagic populations such as anchovies 17 However studies estimate that the increased production in the surrounding areas do not offset the net decrease in productivity resulting from the dead zone For instance an estimated 17 000 MT of carbon in the form of prey for fisheries has been lost as a result of Dead Zones in the Gulf of Mexico 2 Additionally many stressors in fisheries are worsened by hypoxic conditions Indirect factors such as increased success by invasive species and increased pandemic intensity in stressed species such as oysters both lead to losses in revenue and ecological stability in affected regions 19 Coral reefs edit nbsp In many places coral reefs are experiencing worse hypoxia which can lead to bleaching and mass coral die offs There has been a severe increase in mass mortality events associated with low oxygen causing mass hypoxia with the majority having been in the last 2 decades The rise in water temperature leads to an increase in oxygen demand and the increase for ocean deoxygenation which causes these large coral reef dead zones For many coral reefs the response to this hypoxia is very dependent on the magnitude and duration of the deoxygenation The symptoms can be anywhere from reduced photosynthesis and calcification to bleaching Hypoxia can have indirect effects like the abundance of algae and spread of coral diseases in the ecosystems While coral is unable to handle such low levels of oxygen algae is quite tolerant Because of this in interaction zones between algae and coral increased hypoxia will cause more coral death and higher spread of algae The increase mass coral dead zones is reinforced by the spread of coral diseases Coral diseases can spread easily when there are high concentrations of sulfide and hypoxic conditions Due to the loop of hypoxia and coral reef mortality the fish and other marine life that inhabit the coral reefs have a change in behavioral in response to the hypoxia Some fish will go upwards to find more oxygenated water and some enter a phase of metabolic and ventilatory depression Invertebrates migrate out of their homes to the surface of substratum or move to the tips of arborescent coral colonies 20 21 22 Around six million people the majority who live in developing countries depend on coral reef fisheries These mass die offs due to extreme hypoxic events can have severe impacts on reef fish populations Coral reef ecosystems offer a variety of essential ecosystem services including shoreline protection nitrogen fixation and waste assimilation and tourism opportunities The continued decline of oxygen in oceans on coral reefs is concerning because it takes many years decades to repair and regrow corals 20 Jellyfish blooms edit Despite most other life forms being killed by the lack of oxygen jellyfish can thrive and are sometimes present in dead zones in vast numbers Jellyfish blooms produce large quantities of mucus leading to major changes in food webs in the ocean since few organisms feed on them The organic carbon in mucus is metabolized by bacteria which return it to the atmosphere in the form of carbon dioxide in what has been termed a jelly carbon shunt 23 The potential worsening of jellyfish blooms as a result of human activities has driven new research into the influence of dead zones on jelly populations The primary concern is the potential for dead zones to serve as breeding grounds for jelly populations as a result of the hypoxic conditions driving away competition for resources and common predators of jellyfish 24 The increased population of jellyfish could have high commercial costs with loss of fisheries destruction and contamination of trawling nets and fishing vessels and lowered tourism revenue in coastal systems 24 Seagrass beds edit Globally seagrass has been declining rapidly It is estimated that 21 of the 71 known seagrass species have decreasing population trends and 11 of those species have been designated as threatened on the ICUN Red List Hypoxia that leads to eutrophication caused form ocean deoxygenation is one of the main underlying factors of these die offs Eutrophication causes enhanced nutrient enrichment which can result in seagrass productivity but with continual nutrient enrichment in seagrass meadows it can cause excessive growth of microalgae epiphytes and phytoplankton resulting in hypoxic conditions 20 Seagrass is both a source and a sink for oxygen in the surrounding water column and sediments At night the inner part of seagrass oxygen pressure is linearly related to the oxygen concentration in the water column so low water column oxygen concentrations often result in hypoxic seagrass tissues which can eventually kill off the seagrass Normally seagrass sediments must supply oxygen to the below ground tissue through either photosynthesis or by diffusing oxygen from the water column through leaves to rhizomes and roots However with the change in seagrass oxygen balances it can often result in hypoxic seagrass tissues Seagrass exposed to this hypoxic water column show increased respiration reduced rates of photosynthesis smaller leaves and reduced number of leaves per shoot This causes insufficient supply of oxygen to the belowground tissues for aerobic respiration so seagrass must rely on the less efficient anaerobic respiration Seagrass die offs create a positive feedback loop in which the mortality events cause more death as higher oxygen demands are created when dead plant material decomposes 25 Because hypoxia increases the invasion of sulfides in seagrass this negatively affects seagrass through photosynthesis metabolism and growth Generally seagrass is able to combat the sulfides by supplying enough oxygen to the roots However deoxygenation causes the seagrass to be unable to supply this oxygen thus killing it off 25 Deoxygenation reduces the diversity of organisms inhabiting seagrass beds by eliminating species that cannot tolerate the low oxygen conditions Indirectly the loss and degradation of seagrass threatens numerous species that rely on seagrass for either shelter or food The loss of seagrass also effects the physical characteristics and resilience of seagrass ecosystems Seagrass beds provide nursery grounds and habitat to many harvested commercial recreational and subsistence fish and shellfish In many tropical regions local people are dependent on seagrass associated fisheries as a source of food and income 25 Seagrass also provides many ecosystem services including water purification coastal protection erosion control sequestration and delivery of trophic subsidies to adjacent marine and terrestrial habitats Continued deoxygenation causes the effects of hypoxia to be compounded by climate change which will increase the decline in seagrass populations 26 25 Mangrove forests edit Compared to seagrass beds and coral reefs hypoxia is more common on a regular basis in mangrove ecosystems though ocean deoxygenation is compounding the negative effects by anthropogenic nutrient inputs and land use modification 20 Like seagrass mangrove trees transport oxygen to roots of rhizomes reduce sulfide concentrations and alter microbial communities Dissolved oxygen is more readily consumed in the interior of the mangrove forest Anthropogenic inputs may push the limits of survival in many mangrove microhabitats For example shrimp ponds constructed in mangrove forests are considered the greatest anthropogenic threat to mangrove ecosystems These shrimp ponds reduce estuary circulation and water quality which leads to the promotion of diel cycling hypoxia When the quality of the water degrades the shrimp ponds are quickly abandoned leaving massive amounts of wastewater This is a major source of water pollution that promotes ocean deoxygenation in the adjacent habitats 20 27 Due to these frequent hypoxic conditions the water does not provide habitats to fish When exposed to extreme hypoxia ecosystem function can completely collapse Extreme deoxygenation will affect the local fish populations which are an essential food source The environmental costs of shrimp farms in the mangrove forests grossly outweigh their economic benefits Cessation of shrimp production and restoration of these areas and reduce eutrophication and anthropogenic hypoxia 20 Locations editIn the 1970s marine dead zones were first noted in settled areas where intensive economic use stimulated scientific scrutiny in the U S East Coast s Chesapeake Bay in Scandinavia s strait called the Kattegat which is the mouth of the Baltic Sea and in other important Baltic Sea fishing grounds in the Black Sea and in the northern Adriatic 28 Other marine dead zones have appeared in coastal waters of South America China Japan and New Zealand A 2008 study counted 405 dead zones worldwide 4 2 Baltic Sea edit Main article Baltic Sea hypoxia Researchers from Baltic Nest Institute published in one of PNAS issues reports that the dead zones in the Baltic Sea have grown from approximately 5 000 km2 to more than 60 000 km2 in recent years citation needed Some of the causes behind the elevated increase of dead zones can be attributed to the use of fertilizers large animal farms the burning of fossil fuels and effluents from municipal wastewater treatment plants 29 With its massive size the Baltic Sea is best analyzed in sub areas rather than as a whole In a paper published in 2004 researchers specifically divided the Baltic Sea into 9 sub areas each having its own specific characteristics 30 The 9 sub areas are discerned as follows Gulf of Bothnia Archipelago region Gulf of Finland Gulf of Riga Gulf of Gdansk Swedish East coast Central Baltic Belt Sea region and Kattegat 30 Each sub area has responded differently to nutrient additions and eutrophication however there are a few general patterns and measures for the Baltic Sea as a whole 30 As the researchers Ronnberg and Bonsdorff state Irrespective of the area specific effects of the increased loads of nutrients to the Baltic Sea the sources are more or less similar in the whole region The extent and the severity of the discharges may differ however As is seen in e g HELCOM 1996 and Ronnberg 2001 the major sources in the input of nutrients are derived from agriculture industry municipal sewage and transports Nitrogen emissions in form of atmospheric depositions are also important as well as local point sources such as aquaculture and leakage from forestry 30 In general each area of the Baltic Sea is experiencing similar anthropogenic effects As Ronnberg and Bonsdorff state Eutrophication is a serious problem in the Baltic Sea area 30 However when it comes to implementation of water revival programs each area likely will need to be handled on a local level citation needed Chesapeake Bay edit nbsp Dissolved oxygen levels required by various species in Chesapeake BayAs reported by the National Geographic The Chesapeake Bay on the East Coast of the United States has one of the first dead zones ever identified in the 1970s The Chesapeake s high levels of nitrogen are caused by two factors urbanization and agriculture The western part of the bay is full of factories and urban centers that emit nitrogen into the air Atmospheric nitrogen accounts for about a third of the nitrogen that enters the bay The eastern part of the bay is a center of poultry farming which produces large amounts of manure 31 The National Geographic further stated Since 1967 the Chesapeake Bay Foundation has led a number of programs that aim to improve the bay s water quality and curb pollution runoff The Chesapeake still has a dead zone whose size varies with the season and weather 31 Elizabeth River Virginia edit The Elizabeth River estuary is important for Norfolk Virginia Chesapeake Virginia Virginia Beach Virginia and Portsmouth Virginia It has been polluted by nitrogen and phosphorus but also toxic deposits from the shipbuilding industry the military the world s largest coal export facility refineries loading docks container repair facilities and others so fish had been offlimits since the 1920s In 1993 a group formed to clean it up adopting the mummichog as a mascot and has removed thousands of tons of contaminated sediment In 2006 a 35 acre biological dead zone called Money Point was dredged out and this let fish return and the wetland recover 32 Lake Erie edit A seasonal dead zone exists in the central part of Lake Erie from east of Point Pelee to Long Point and stretches to shores in Canada and the United States Between the months of July and October the dead zone has the ability to grow to the size of 10 000 square kilometers 33 Lake Erie has an excess of phosphorus due to agricultural runoff that quickens the growth of algae which then contributes to hypoxic conditions 34 The superabundance of phosphorus in the lake has been linked to nonpoint source pollution such as urban and agricultural runoff as well as point source pollution that includes sewage and wastewater treatment plants 35 The zone was first noticed in the 1960s amid the peak of eutrophication occurring in the lake 36 After public concern increased Canada and the US launched efforts to reduce runoff pollution into the lake in the 1970s as means to reverse the dead zone growth 36 Scientists in 2018 stated that phosphorus runoff would have to further decrease by 40 to avoid the emergence of the dead zones in the area 37 The commercial and recreational fishing industry have been significantly impacted by the hypoxic zone 33 In 2021 the low oxygenated waters caused a mass kill event of freshwater drum fish species also known as sheepshead fish 38 Water from the lake is also used for human drinking 39 Water from the lake has been said to acquire a pervasive odor and discoloration when the dead zone is active in the late summer months 40 Lower St Lawrence Estuary edit A dead zone exists in the Lower St Lawrence River area from east the Saguenay River to east of Baie Comeau greatest at depths over 275 metres 902 ft and noticed since the 1930s 41 The main concern for Canadian scientists is the impact on fish found in the area citation needed Oregon edit There is a hypoxic zone covers the coasts of Oregon and Washington 42 that reached peak size in 2006 at an area of over 1 158 square miles 43 Strong surface winds between April and September cause frequent upwelling that results in an increase of algae blooms rendering the hypoxia a seasonal occurrence 44 The upwelling has contributed to lower temperatures within the zone 45 The dead zone has resulted in sea organisms such as crabs and fish relocating and an interference of commercial fishing 42 Organisms that cannot relocate have been found to suffocate leaving them unable to be used by fishermen 46 In 2009 one scientist described thousands and thousands of suffocated crabs worms and sea stars along the seafloor of the hypoxic zone 47 In 2021 1 9 million dollars were put into monitoring and continuing to study the hypoxic conditions in the area that the dead zone occurs in 46 Gulf of Mexico dead zone edit nbsp Dead zone in the Gulf of MexicoThe area of temporary hypoxic bottom water that occurs most summers off the coast of Louisiana in the Gulf of Mexico 48 is the largest recurring hypoxic zone in the United States 49 It occurs only during the summer months of the year due to summer warming regional circulation wind mixing and high freshwater discharge 50 The Mississippi River which is the drainage area for 41 of the continental United States dumps high nutrient runoff such as nitrates and phosphorus into the Gulf of Mexico According to a 2009 fact sheet created by NOAA seventy percent of nutrient loads that cause hypoxia are a result of this vast drainage basin 51 which includes the heart of U S agribusiness the Midwest The discharge of treated sewage from urban areas pop c 12 million in 2009 combined with agricultural runoff deliver c 1 7 million tons of phosphorus and nitrogen into the Gulf of Mexico every year 51 Nitrogen is indeed needed to increase crop yields but plants are inefficient at taking it up and often more fertilizers are used than plants actually need Therefore only a percentage of applied nitrogen ends up in the crops and in some areas that number is less than 20 52 Even though Iowa occupies less than 5 of the Mississippi River drainage basin average annual nitrate discharge from surface water in Iowa is about 204 000 to 222 000 metric tonnes or 25 of all the nitrate which the Mississippi River delivers to the Gulf of Mexico 53 Export from the Raccoon River Watershed is among the highest in the United States with annual yields at 26 1 kg ha year which ranked as the highest loss of nitrate out of 42 Mississippi subwatersheds evaluated for a Gulf of Mexico hypoxia report 54 55 In 2012 Iowa introduced the Iowa Nutrient Reduction Strategy which is a science and technology based framework to assess and reduce nutrients to Iowa waters and the Gulf of Mexico It is designed to direct efforts to reduce nutrients in surface water from both point and nonpoint sources in a scientific reasonable and cost effective manner 56 The strategy continues to evolve using voluntary methods to reduce Iowa s negative contributions through outreach research and implementation of nutrient holding practices In order to help reduce agricultural runoff into the Mississippi Basin Minnesota passed MN Statute 103F 48 in 2015 also known as the Buffer Law which was designed to implement mandatory riparian buffers between farmland and public waterways across the State of Minnesota The Minnesota Board of Water and Soil Resources BWSR issued a January 2019 report stating that compliance with the Buffer Law has reached 99 citation needed Size edit The area of hypoxic bottom water that occurs for several weeks each summer in the Gulf of Mexico has been mapped most years from 1985 through 2017 The size varies annually from a record high in 2017 when it encompassed more than 22 730 square kilometers 8 776 square miles to a record low in 1988 of 39 square kilometers 15 square miles 57 48 58 The 2015 dead zone measured 16 760 square kilometers 6 474 square miles 59 Nancy Rabalais of the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium in Cocodrie Louisiana predicted the dead zone or hypoxic zone in 2012 will cover an area of 17 353 square kilometers 6 700 square miles which is larger than Connecticut however when the measurements were completed the area of hypoxic bottom water in 2012 only totaled 7 480 square kilometers The models using the nitrogen flux from the Mississippi River to predict the dead zone areas have been criticized for being systematically high from 2006 to 2014 having predicted record areas in 2007 2008 2009 2011 and 2013 that were never realized 60 In late summer 1988 the dead zone disappeared as the great drought caused the flow of Mississippi to fall to its lowest level since 1933 During times of heavy flooding in the Mississippi River Basin as in 1993 the dead zone dramatically increased in size approximately 5 000 km 3 107 mi larger than the previous year 61 Economic impact edit Some assert that the dead zone threatens lucrative commercial and recreational fisheries in the Gulf of Mexico In 2009 the dockside value of commercial fisheries in the Gulf was 629 million Nearly three million recreational fishers further contributed about 10 billion to the Gulf economy taking 22 million fishing trips 62 Scientists are not in universal agreement that nutrient loading has a negative impact on fisheries Grimes makes a case that nutrient loading enhances the fisheries in the Gulf of Mexico 63 Courtney et al hypothesize that nutrient loading may have contributed to the increases in red snapper in the northern and western Gulf of Mexico 64 In 2017 Tulane University offered a 1 million challenge grant for growing crops with less fertilizer 65 History edit Shrimp trawlers first reported a dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico in 1950 but it was not until 1970 when the size of the hypoxic zone had increased that scientists began to investigate 66 After 1950 the conversion of forests and wetlands for agricultural and urban developments accelerated Missouri River Basin has had hundreds of thousands of acres of forests and wetlands 66 000 000 acres replaced with agriculture activity In the Lower Mississippi one third of the valley s forests were converted to agriculture between 1950 and 1976 66 In July 2007 a dead zone was discovered off the coast of Texas where the Brazos River empties into the Gulf 67 Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 editThe Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 calls for the production of 36 billion US gallons 140 000 000 m3 of renewable fuels by 2022 including 15 billion US gallons 57 000 000 m3 of corn based ethanol a tripling of current production that would require a similar increase in corn production 68 Unfortunately the plan poses a new problem the increase in demand for corn production results in a proportional increase in nitrogen runoff Although nitrogen which makes up 78 of the Earth s atmosphere is an inert gas it has more reactive forms two of which nitrate and ammonia are used to make fertilizer 69 According to Fred Below a professor of crop physiology at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign corn requires more nitrogen based fertilizer because it produces a higher grain per unit area than other crops and unlike other crops corn is completely dependent on available nitrogen in soil The results reported 18 March 2008 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences showed that scaling up corn production to meet the 15 billion US gallon 57 000 000 m3 goal would increase nitrogen loading in the Dead Zone by 10 18 This would boost nitrogen levels to twice the level recommended by the Mississippi Basin Gulf of Mexico Water Nutrient Task Force Mississippi River Watershed Conservation Programs a coalition of federal state and tribal agencies that have monitored the dead zone since 1997 The task force says a 30 reduction of nitrogen runoff is needed if the dead zone is to shrink 68 Reversal editFurther information Eutrophication Prevention The recovery of benthic communities is primarily dependent upon the length and severity of hypoxic conditions inside the hypoxic zone Less severe conditions and temporary depletion of oxygen allow rapid recovery of benthic communities in the area due to reestablishment by benthic larvae from adjacent areas with longer conditions of hypoxia and more severe oxygen depletion leading to longer reestablishment periods 2 Recovery also depends upon stratification levels within the area so heavily stratified areas in warmer waters are less likely to recover from anoxic or hypoxic conditions in addition to being more susceptible to eutrophication driven hypoxia 2 The difference in recovery ability and susceptibility to hypoxia in stratified marine environments is expected to complicate recovery efforts of dead zones in the future as ocean warming continues citation needed Small scale hypoxic systems with rich surrounding communities are the most likely to recover after nutrient influxes leading to eutrophication stop However depending on the extent of damage and characteristics of the zone large scale hypoxic condition could also potentially recover after a period of a decade For example the Black Sea dead zone previously the largest in the world largely disappeared between 1991 and 2001 after fertilizers became too costly to use following the collapse of the Soviet Union and the demise of centrally planned economies in Eastern and Central Europe Fishing has again become a major economic activity in the region 70 While the Black Sea cleanup was largely unintentional and involved a drop in hard to control fertilizer usage the U N has advocated other cleanups by reducing large industrial emissions 70 From 1985 to 2000 the North Sea dead zone had nitrogen reduced by 37 when policy efforts by countries on the Rhine River reduced sewage and industrial emissions of nitrogen into the water Other cleanups have taken place along the Hudson River 71 and San Francisco Bay 4 See also editAlgal bloom Anoxic event Anoxic waters Cultural eutrophication Desert Eutrophication Fish kill Hypoxia Marine pollution Ocean deoxygenation Oxygen minimum zone Shutdown of thermohaline circulationNotes edit Aquatic Dead Zones Nasa Earth Observatory 17 July 2010 Retrieved 19 July 2023 a b c d e f g h Diaz R J Rosenberg R 2008 08 15 Spreading Dead Zones and Consequences for Marine Ecosystems Science 321 5891 926 929 Bibcode 2008Sci 321 926D doi 10 1126 science 1156401 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 18703733 S2CID 32818786 NOAA Gulf of Mexico dead zone predictions feature uncertainty National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration NOAA June 21 2012 Retrieved June 23 2012 a b c Perlman David 15 August 2008 Scientists alarmed by ocean dead zone growth SFGate a b Blooming horrible Nutrient pollution is a growing problem all along the Mississippi The Economist 2012 06 23 Retrieved June 23 2012 Gough Rachel Holliman Peter J Cooke Gavan M Freeman Christopher 2015 09 01 Characterisation of algogenic organic matter during an algal bloom and its implications for trihalomethane formation Sustainability of Water Quality and Ecology 6 11 19 doi 10 1016 j swaqe 2014 12 008 ISSN 2212 6139 S2CID 40921462 David W Schindler John R Vallentyne 2008 The Algal Bowl Overfertilization of the World s Freshwaters and Estuaries Edmonton Alberta University of Alberta Press ISBN 978 0888644848 a b Le Moal Morgane Gascuel Odoux Chantal Menesguen Alain Souchon Yves Etrillard Levain Alix Pinay Gilles 2019 Eutrophication A new wine in an old bottle Elsevier Science of the Total Environment 651 1 11 Gregg M C and E O zsoy 2002 Flow water mass changes and hydraulics in the Bosporus J Geophys Res 107 C3 3016 doi 10 1029 2000JC000485 Pickard G L and Emery W J 1982 Description Physical Oceanography An Introduction Pergamon Press Oxford page 47 Mora C et al 2013 Biotic and Human Vulnerability to Projected Changes in Ocean Biogeochemistry over the 21st Century PLOS Biology 11 10 e1001682 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 1001682 PMC 3797030 PMID 24143135 Corn boom could expand dead zone in Gulf NBC News msn com Milman Oliver 2017 08 01 Meat industry blamed for largest ever dead zone in Gulf of Mexico The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2017 08 04 von Reusner Lucia August 1 2017 Mystery Meat II The Industry Behind the Quiet Destruction of the American Heartland PDF Mighty Earth Retrieved August 4 2017 FAO sets the record straight 86 of livestock feed is inedible by humans Helmenstine Anne Marie May 10 2018 What You Need to Know About Dead Zones in the Ocean ThoughtCo a b c d e Rabalais Nancy N Turner R Eugene Wiseman William J 2002 Gulf of Mexico Hypoxia A K A The Dead Zone Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 33 1 235 263 doi 10 1146 annurev ecolsys 33 010802 150513 ISSN 0066 4162 Diaz Robert Rosenberg Rutger 1995 01 01 Marine benthic hypoxia A review of its ecological effects and the behavioural response of benthic macrofauna Oceanography and Marine Biology An Annual Review 33 245 303 Anderson R S Brubacher L L Calvo L Ragone Unger M A Burreson E M 1998 Effects of tributyltin and hypoxia on the progression of Perkinsus marinus infections and host defence mechanisms in oyster Crassostrea virginica Gmelin Journal of Fish Diseases 21 5 371 380 Bibcode 1998JFDis 21 371A doi 10 1046 j 1365 2761 1998 00128 x ISSN 0140 7775 a b c d e f Laffoley D amp Baxter J M eds 2019 Ocean deoxygenation Everyone s problem Causes impacts consequences and solutions IUCN Switzerland Anthony KRN et al 2008 Ocean acidification causes bleaching and productivity loss in coral reef builders Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 105 45 17442 17446 Bibcode 2008PNAS 10517442A doi 10 1073 pnas 0804478105 PMC 2580748 PMID 18988740 Vanwonterghem I and Webster N S 2020 Coral reef microorganisms in a changing climate Iscience 23 4 doi 10 1016 j isci 2020 100972 Yong Ed 6 June 2011 Jellyfish shift ocean food webs by feeding bacteria with mucus and excrement Discover Magazine Archived from the original on 6 November 2018 Retrieved 4 October 2018 a b Richardson Anthony J Bakun Andrew Hays Graeme C Gibbons Mark J 2009 06 01 The jellyfish joyride causes consequences and management responses to a more gelatinous future Trends in Ecology amp Evolution 24 6 312 322 doi 10 1016 j tree 2009 01 010 ISSN 0169 5347 PMID 19324452 a b c d Laffoley D amp Baxter J M eds 2019 Ocean deoxygenation Everyone s problem Causes impacts consequences and solutions IUCN Switzerland Waycott M Duarte C M Carruthers T J Orth R J Dennison W C Olyarnik S Calladine A Fourqurean J W Heck K L Hughes A R and Kendrick G A 2009 Accelerating loss of seagrasses across the globe threatens coastal ecosystems Proceedings of the national academy of sciences 106 30 12377 12381 doi 10 1073 pnas 0905620106 2010a World Atlas of Mangroves Highlights the Importance of and Threats to Mangroves Mangroves among World s Most Valuable Ecosystems Press release Arlington Virginia The Nature Conservancy Archived from the original on 2010 07 17 Retrieved 2014 01 25 Karleskint Turner Small 2013 Introduction to Marine Biology 4 ed Brooks Cole p 4 ISBN 978 1133364467 Dead zones have increased by more than 10 fold in the last century Baltic Nest Institute www balticnest org 2014 04 01 Retrieved 2018 06 04 a b c d e Ronnberg Cecilia Bonsdorff Erik 2004 Baltic Sea eutrophication Area specific ecological consequences Hydrobiologia 514 1 3 227 241 doi 10 1023 B HYDR 0000019238 84989 7f S2CID 21390591 a b Dead zone 2011 01 21 Kobell Rona July 1 2011 Elizabeth River rises from the depths Bay Journal Archived from the original on September 25 2019 Retrieved September 25 2019 a b Almeida Zoe 2015 Lake Erie s Dead Zone PDF Old Woman Creek National Estuarine Research Reserve Archived PDF from the original on 2021 07 15 Release of nutrients worsens Lake Erie s annual dead zone The University Record record umich edu Retrieved 2021 10 04 Ohio Environmental Protection Agency April 2010 Ohio Lake Erie Phosphorus Final Report PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2010 12 27 a b Conroy Joseph D Boegman Leon Zhang Hongyan Edwards William J Culver David A 2011 05 01 Dead Zone dynamics in Lake Erie the importance of weather and sampling intensity for calculated hypolimnetic oxygen depletion rates Aquatic Sciences 73 2 289 304 Bibcode 2011AqSci 73 289C doi 10 1007 s00027 010 0176 1 ISSN 1420 9055 S2CID 24193869 McCarty James F Dealer The Plain 2018 07 25 Lake Erie dead zone threatens Cleveland drinking water cleveland Retrieved 2021 10 04 What s behind all of the dead fish along Lake Erie wkyc com September 4 2021 Retrieved 2021 10 04 Lake Erie Cleveland Water Department 2013 05 30 Retrieved 2021 10 04 Briscoe Tony 14 November 2019 Cleveland residents are used to their water being brown even if they don t know why The answer lies at the bottom of Lake Erie chicagotribune com Retrieved 2021 10 04 Will Dead Zones Spread in the St Lawrence River Archived from the original on 2013 06 26 a b Dead zone lingers in ocean off Oregon Coast longer than expected kgw com September 10 2021 Retrieved 2021 10 04 Dead Zones Special Report NSF National Science Foundation www nsf gov Retrieved 2021 10 04 Low oxygen waters off Washington Oregon coasts risk becoming large dead zones Welcome to NOAA Research research noaa gov 21 July 2021 Retrieved 2021 10 04 Pacific Cooler Than Normal in Oregon Dead Zone earthobservatory nasa gov 2006 09 01 Retrieved 2021 10 04 a b Low oxygen levels off Northwest coast raise fears of marine dead zones opb Retrieved 2021 10 04 Dead Zone Causing a Wave of Death Off Oregon Coast Life at OSU 2009 10 30 Retrieved 2021 10 04 a b NOAA Gulf of Mexico Dead Zone Predictions Feature Uncertainty U S Geological Survey USGS June 21 2012 Archived from the original on 2016 04 11 Retrieved June 23 2012 What is hypoxia Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium LUMCON Archived from the original on June 12 2013 Retrieved May 18 2013 Rabalais Nancy August 14 2002 Gulf of Mexico Hypoxia A K A The Dead Zone Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 33 1 235 263 doi 10 1146 annurev ecolsys 33 010802 150513 a b Dead Zone Hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico PDF NOAA 2009 Retrieved June 23 2012 Dybas Cheryl Lyn July 2005 Dead Zones Spreading in World Oceans BioScience 55 7 552 557 doi 10 1641 0006 3568 2005 055 0552 DZSIWO 2 0 CO 2 Schilling Keith E Libra Robert D 2000 The Relationship of Nitrate Concentrations in Streams to Row Crop Land Use in Iowa Journal of Environmental Quality 29 6 1846 Bibcode 2000JEnvQ 29 1846S doi 10 2134 jeq2000 00472425002900060016x Goolsby Donald A Battaglin William A Aulenbach Brent T Hooper Richard P 2001 Nitrogen Input to the Gulf of Mexico Journal of Environmental Quality 30 2 329 36 Bibcode 2001JEnvQ 30 329G doi 10 2134 jeq2001 302329x PMID 11285892 Board of Water Works Trustees of the City of Des Moines Iowa Plaintiff vs Sac County Board of Supervisors et al PDF United States District Court for The Northern District of Iowa Western Division March 16 2015 Archived from the original PDF on August 5 2016 Retrieved March 9 2017 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Iowa Nutrient Reduction Strategy Iowa Nutrient Reduction Strategy www nutrientstrategy iastate edu Retrieved 2018 10 16 NOAA Gulf of Mexico dead zone is the largest ever measured National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration NOAA August 3 2017 Archived from the original on August 2 2017 Retrieved August 3 2017 Lochhead Carolyn 2010 07 06 Dead zone in gulf linked to ethanol production San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved 2010 07 28 2015 Gulf of Mexico Hypoxic Zone Size Mississippi River Gulf of Mexico Hypoxia Task Force EPA n d Courtney Michael W Courtney Joshua M 2013 Predictions Wrong Again on Dead Zone Area Gulf of Mexico Gaining Resistance to Nutrient Loading arXiv 1307 8064 q bio QM Lisa M Fairchild 2005 The influence of stakeholder groups on the decision making process regarding the dead zone associated with the Mississippi river discharge Master of Science University of South Florida USF p 14 Gulf of Mexico Dead Zone Predictions Feature Uncertainty Press release NOAA June 21 2012 Archived from the original on July 29 2020 Retrieved September 25 2019 Grimes Churchill B August 2001 Fishery Production and the Mississippi River Discharge Fisheries 26 8 17 26 doi 10 1577 1548 8446 2001 026 lt 0017 FPATMR gt 2 0 CO 2 Courtney Joshua M Courtney Amy C Courtney Michael W 21 June 2013 Nutrient Loading Increases Red Snapper Production in the Gulf of Mexico Hypotheses in the Life Sciences 3 1 7 14 14 arXiv 1306 5114 Bibcode 2013arXiv1306 5114C Adapt N Wins Tulane Nitrogen Reduction Challenge to Reduce Dead Zones What s Next Press release 19 December 2017 a b Jennie Biewald Annie Rossetti Joseph Stevens Wei Cheih Wong The Gulf of Mexico s Hypoxic Zone Report Cox Tony 2007 07 23 Exclusive Bloomberg Archived from the original on 2010 06 09 Retrieved 2010 08 03 a b Potera Carol 2008 Fuels Corn Ethanol Goal Revives Dead Zone Concerns Environmental Health Perspectives 116 6 A242 A243 doi 10 1289 ehp 116 a242 PMC 2430248 PMID 18560496 Dead Water Economist May 2008 a b Mee Laurence November 2006 Reviving Dead Zones Scientific American Dead Zones Multiplying In World s Oceans by John Nielsen 15 Aug 2008 Morning Edition NPR References editDiaz R J Rosenberg R 15 August 2008 Spreading Dead Zones and Consequences for Marine Ecosystems Science 321 5891 926 929 Bibcode 2008Sci 321 926D doi 10 1126 science 1156401 PMID 18703733 S2CID 32818786 Osterman Lisa E Poore Richard Z Swarzenski Peter W Turner R Eugene 2005 Reconstructing a 180 yr record of natural and anthropogenic induced low oxygen conditions from Louisiana continental shelf sediments Geology 33 4 329 Bibcode 2005Geo 33 329O doi 10 1130 G21341 1 S2CID 55361042 Taylor F J Taylor N J Walsby J R 1985 A Bloom of the Planktonic Diatom Cerataulina pelagica off the Coast of Northeastern New Zealand in 1983 and its Contribution to an Associated Mortality of Fish and Benthic Fauna Internationale Revue der gesamten Hydrobiologie und Hydrographie 70 6 773 795 doi 10 1002 iroh 19850700602 Morrisey D J Gibbs M M Pickmere S E Cole R G May 2000 Predicting impacts and recovery of marine farm sites in Stewart Island New Zealand from the Findlay Watling model Aquaculture 185 3 4 257 271 Bibcode 2000Aquac 185 257M doi 10 1016 s0044 8486 99 00360 9 Potera Carol June 2008 Fuels Corn Ethanol Goal Revives Dead Zone Concerns Environmental Health Perspectives 116 6 A242 3 doi 10 1289 ehp 116 a242 PMC 2430248 PMID 18560496 Minnesota Board of Water and Soil Resources BWSR 2018 Alternative Practices Introduction MN Board of Water Soil Resources Minnesota Buffer Law statute MN Statute 103F 48 BWSR Update January 2019 1 Archived 2019 02 16 at the Wayback Machine Ronnberg C amp Bonsdorff E 2004 Feb Baltic Sea eutrophication area specific ecological consequences Article Proceedings Paper Hydrobiologia 514 1 3 227 241 https doi org 10 1023 B HYDR 0000019238 84989 7f Le Moal Morgane Gascuel Odoux Chantal Menesguen Alain Souchon Yves Etrillard Levain Alix Pinay Gilles 2019 Eutrophication A new wine in an old bottle Elsevier Science of the Total Environment 651 1 11 Further reading editGrowing dead zone Confirmed by Underwater Robots in the Gulf of Oman phys org April 2018 Hendy Ian August 2017 Gulf of Mexico dead zone is already a disaster but it could get worse The Conversation Bryant Lee April 2015 Ocean dead zones are spreading and that spells disaster for fish The Conversation David Stauth Oregon State University Hypoxic dead zone growing off the Oregon Coast July 31 2006 at archive today archived 2013 01 29 Suzie Greenhalgh and Amanda Sauer WRI Awakening the Dead Zone An investment for agriculture water quality and climate change 2003 Reyes Tirado July 2008 Dead Zones How Agricultural Fertilizers are Killing our Rivers Lakes and Oceans Greenpeace publications See also Dead Zones How Agricultural Fertilizers are Killing our Rivers Lakes and Oceans Greenpeace Canada 2008 07 07 Archived from the original on 2010 09 08 Retrieved 2010 08 03 MSNBC report on dead zones March 29 2004 Joel Achenbach A Dead Zone in The Gulf of Mexico Scientists Say Area That Cannot Support Some Marine Life Is Near Record Size The Washington Post July 31 2008 Joel Achenbach Dead Zones Appear In Waters Worldwide New Study Estimates More Than 400 The Washington Post August 15 2008External links editLouisiana Universities Marine Consortium UN Geo Yearbook 2003 report on nitrogen and dead zones at the Library of Congress Web Archives archived 2005 08 02 NASA on dead zones Satellite pictures Archived 2015 11 23 at the Wayback Machine Gulf of Mexico Dead Zone multimedia Gulf of Mexico Hypoxia Watch NOAA Joel Achenbach at the Wayback Machine archived 2007 10 09 NutrientNet at the Wayback Machine archived 2010 07 11 an online nutrient trading tool developed by the World Resources Institute designed to address issues of eutrophication See also the PA NutrientNet website designed for Pennsylvania s nutrient trading program Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dead zone ecology amp oldid 1205490120, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.