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"As usual, the size of the low oxygen offshore is driven by both the freshwater and nitrogen levels in the Mississippi, so this year we have had floods and we have had more nitrate coming into the system," said Nancy Rabalais, the executive director of the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium. Rabalais is a lead researcher into the dead zone. She expected the dead zone to extend more to the west toward Texas and farther offshore than in past years. Scientists said the large dead zone will complicate the Gulf's recovery from last year's massive oil spill. After the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig exploded on April 20, 2010, an out-of-control well owned by BP PLC spewed about 206 million gallons of oil
-- 19 times more than the Exxon Valdez spilled. "This is an additional stressor," Rabalais said. "It's our chronic stressor."
[Associated
Press;
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