Near-record 'dead zone' forecast off U.S.
Gulf coast, threatening fish
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[June 11, 2019]
By Rich McKay
(Reuters) - A near record-sized "dead zone"
of oxygen-starved water could form in the Gulf of Mexico this summer,
threatening its huge stocks of marine life, researchers said.
The area could spread over 8,700 square miles (22,500 square km),
scientists at Louisiana State University said on Monday - about the size
of the state of Massachusetts, and five times the average.
Experts blamed unusually high rainfall across the U.S. Midwest this
Spring that washed farm fertilisers along streams and rivers through the
Mississippi River Basin out into the Gulf.
The nutrients in the fertilizers feed algae that die, decompose and
deplete the water of oxygen, the Louisiana scientists said.
“When the oxygen is below two parts per million, any shrimp, crabs, and
fish that can swim away, will swim away,” Louisiana State University
ocean ecologist Nancy Rabalais told the National Geographic magazine.
“The animals in the sediment [that can't swim away] can be close to
annihilated.”
The problem might get even worse if any more significant tropical storms
wash out more farm-fed nutrients, the scientists said.
Sewage run off, caused by the spring floods, also add to the problem,
National Geographic reported.
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The rising waters of the Gulf of Mexico crash at the shoreline of
the Treasure Island community of West Galveston Island, Texas March
6, 2014. REUTERS/Rick Wilking/File Photo
Scientists with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
predicted a slightly smaller 7,829 square-mile spread. The record
was 8,776 square miles set in 2017.
"A major factor contributing to the large dead zone this year is the
abnormally high amount of spring rainfall in many parts of the
Mississippi River watershed," the agency said in its annual "dead
zone" forecast.
A solution would be to keep fertilizer and sewage run-off from
getting into the rivers, NOAA said.
A Mississippi River/Gulf of Mexico Watershed Nutrient Task Force has
been monitoring the problem and has set goals to reduce run-off.
(Reporting by Rich McKay; Editing by Andrew Heavens)
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