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Some of the reports are being published for the first time in journals accessible to Western scientists, he said. Nancy N. Rabalais, executive director of the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium, said she was not surprised at the increase in dead zones. "There have been many more reported, but there truly are many more. What has happened in the industrialized nations with agribusiness as well that led to increased flux of nutrients from the land to the estuaries and the seas is now happening in developing countries," said Rabalais, who was not part of Diaz' research team. She said she was told during a 1989 visit to South America that rivers there were too large to have the same problems as the Mississippi River. "Now many of their estuaries and coastal seas are suffering the same malady." "The increase is a troubling sign for estuarine and coastal waters, which are among some of the most productive waters on the globe," she said. ___ On the Net: Science: http://www.sciencemag.org/ Virginia Institute of Marine Science: http://www.vims.edu/ Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium:
http://www.lumcon.edu/
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