"Dead Zone" In The Gulf Of Mexico Now Bigger Than Ever, Researchers Say

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MICHAEL GRACZYK | July 23, 2008 05:39 AM EST | AP


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HOUSTON — A "dead zone" in the Gulf of Mexico off the Texas-Louisiana coast this year is likely to be the biggest ever and last longer than ever before, with marine life affected for hundreds of miles, a scientist warned.

"It's definitely the worst we've seen in the last five years," said Steve DiMarco, a Texas A&M University professor of oceanography who for 16 years has studied the Gulf of Mexico dead zone, so named because the oxygen-depleted water can kill marine life.

The phenomenon is caused when salt water loses large amounts of oxygen, a condition known as hypoxia that is typically associated with an area off the Louisiana coast at the mouth of the Mississippi River. The fresh water and salt water don't mix well, keeping oxygen from filtering through to the sea bottom, which causes problems for fish, shrimp, crabs and clams.

This year's dead zone has been aggravated by flood runoff from heavy spring rains and additional runoff moving into the Gulf from record floods along the Mississippi.

DiMarco, joined by researchers from Texas A&M and the University of Georgia, just returned from an examination of 74 sites between Terrebonne and Cameron, La. He said the most severe hypoxia levels were recorded in the mid-range depths, between 20 and 30 feet, as well as near the bottom of the sea floor at about 60 feet.

Some of the worst hypoxic levels occurred in the western Gulf toward the state line.

"We saw quite a few areas that had little or no oxygen at all at that site," DiMarco said Tuesday. "This dead zone area is the strongest we've seen since 2004, and it's very likely the worst may be still to come.

"Since most of the water from the Midwest is still making its way down to the Gulf, we believe that wide area of hypoxia will persist through August and likely until September, when it normally ends."

Last year, DiMarco discovered a similar dead zone off the Texas coast where the rain-swollen Brazos River emptied into the Gulf.

The zone off Louisiana reached a record 7,900 square miles in 2002. A recent estimate from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and Louisiana State University shows the zone, which has been monitored for about 25 years, could exceed 8,800 square miles this year, an area roughly the size of New Jersey.

DiMarco said a tropical storm or hurricane likely would have no impact on this year's zone, believed to be caused by nutrient pollution from fertilizers that empty into rivers and eventually reach the Gulf.

HOUSTON — A "dead zone" in the Gulf of Mexico off the Texas-Louisiana coast this year is likely to be the biggest ever and last longer than ever before, with marine life affected for hundreds of...
HOUSTON — A "dead zone" in the Gulf of Mexico off the Texas-Louisiana coast this year is likely to be the biggest ever and last longer than ever before, with marine life affected for hundreds of...
 
 

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- racetoinfinity See Profile I'm a Fan of racetoinfinity permalink

Organic farming was proposed in the early 70s. The corpotocracay squasjed the planet health friendly option to fatten their bottom line in the guise that yields would go up. Another reactionay example of regressive corporate policty, instead of co-operative ecological green consciousness and implementation. Thank you Ronald Reagan et al.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:07 AM on 07/26/2008
- jstwtasec See Profile I'm a Fan of jstwtasec permalink

I think we have to look at the big picture of organic farming though. Unfortunatly, the fact is that traditional farming methods produce twice the harvest per acre over organic. Therefore, if everyone switches over to organic farms we have to clear millions of acres of forest, and wetlands just to keep up with current production. Is this really the answer?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:39 AM on 07/28/2008
- ilovemydoggy See Profile I'm a Fan of ilovemydoggy permalink

We are all probably doomed. Read the native american Prophecies on this.

The Medicine Men who had telepathy, foresaw it.

Read about it here: http://www.nancys-kids.com/Seventh-Fire.htm
Also baby boomer viewpoints: http://www.Vaboomer.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:00 PM on 07/25/2008
- Heavy See Profile I'm a Fan of Heavy permalink

Expanation just in! Rush Limbaugh seen swimming in the Gulf when vacationing. When interviewed about hygene this was his response, "Shower? Why shower when the ocean water gets in all those hard to reach places?"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:18 PM on 07/25/2008
- Heavy See Profile I'm a Fan of Heavy permalink

Er...explanation, sorry fat fingered that one :)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:26 AM on 07/26/2008
- dadw5boys See Profile I'm a Fan of dadw5boys permalink

funny they never mention the AGENT ORANGE still used to defiolate crops before harvest like cotten.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:35 PM on 07/25/2008
- peacekitten See Profile I'm a Fan of peacekitten permalink



salt water carries less oxygen because of the salt itself. fresh water carries much more because there is no salt to displace it. so logically, the influx of PURE fresh water should RAISE the oxygen levels because of a temporary decrease in salinity in those areas.

what keeps the oxygen from filtering to the bottom is the fact that it is bound up with chemicals before it can ever reach there, with chemical bonds that aren't breakable without the necessary catalyst to liberate the 02. 02 binds easily to any available carbon bond, such as those found in the five carbon ring structure of a particularly nasty carcinogen known as benzene. a six carbon ring structure is what is necessary to life, but the five is an insidious masquerader that causes all kinds of problems.

it's chemistry, folks. bonds break and reform all the time, and not always into good things. neither carbon monoxyide nor carbon dioxide (without the catalysts necessary to liberate the 02 present) is a good thing. this is a dead giveaway that all kinds of businesses are circumventing the idea of PURIFYING their waste runoffs BEFORE it reaches the ocean. FYI, marine salts, with their delicate mix of electrolytes and trace minerals, dissolve PERFECTLY in absolutely PURE water.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:43 AM on 07/25/2008
- sharonh See Profile I'm a Fan of sharonh permalink

Who needs the Gulf of Mexico anyway? We can swim in our fertilizer if we feel like swimming.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:29 PM on 07/24/2008
- marignymitch See Profile I'm a Fan of marignymitch permalink

Judging from the photo illustration the scenery on Louisiana beaches has improved dramatically this week. Just after west Texas scenery improved for the windmill story. Is this a HuffPo trend? I hope so because I am weary of the muddy water, the muddy sand and the oil rigs on our coast.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:32 PM on 07/24/2008
- research See Profile I'm a Fan of research permalink

oil leaks from hundreds of rigs,
millions of people's sewage,
millions of tons of fertilizer. pesticides and toxic waste,
90% of the life fished away,
the ocean bottom scraped lifeless,

Why are we getting these dead zones?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:08 PM on 07/24/2008
- Viper See Profile I'm a Fan of Viper permalink

Again the problem is that the number of people have doubled in a very short time. That means more pollution. If you dont limit population growth, give up on the environment!!!

Most human sewage around the world runs into rivers and the oceans. Humans burn hydrocarbons and turn them into CO2, or do you think we dont consume any fuel?

You want people to give up driving for the environment .. OK... but now to save the seas people will have to stop eating, whic will then stop the sewage... lol...

The energy/CO2, pollution is all related to, too many people! You want to save the world, then no tax breaks for more than 2 kids. If you have more than 2 kids, then you are a major polluter even if you drive a Prius and your tax rate should double for each additional child!

Regards

Regards

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:05 PM on 07/24/2008
- sharonh See Profile I'm a Fan of sharonh permalink


It's fertilizer ding dong. Poop is much better for the waters than chemical fertilizer runoff which is the actual cause of this problem. For a good perspective might I suggest you correlate the fertilizer industry in China with their water pollution problem, which is probably the worst in the world. Of course you are aware they already are penalized for too many children

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:39 PM on 07/24/2008
- stevelegore See Profile I'm a Fan of stevelegore permalink

It's both, actually. The phytoplankton cell does not care whether that nutrient molecule originates with the fertilizer or from the poop. It's all the same from its perspective. Any fix will have to consider sewage management as well as fertilizer use controls. An awful lot of people dump their stuff into the Ohio, Missouri and Mississippi Rivers, and it all makes its way south to the Gulf of Mexico.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:40 AM on 07/25/2008
- stevelegore See Profile I'm a Fan of stevelegore permalink

It's both, actually. The phytoplankton cell does not care whether that nutrient molecule is contributed by fertilizer or the poop. Any cure will have to include sewage management as well as fertilizer control. There are an awful lot of people dumping their stuff into the Ohio, Missouri and Mississippi Rivers, and it all makes its way south.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:31 AM on 07/25/2008
- mexicanamerican1948 See Profile I'm a Fan of mexicanamerican1948 permalink

yeah, the penalty is called forced abortion, individual freedom limited in the next Superpower, China, It will put all USA and Europe in second place, prepare to learn Mandarin... they are not too interested in the earth... only to dominate it, while we argue , they rearm and ready to dominate. Get ready in 20 yrs...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:55 PM on 07/24/2008
- ErnestineBass See Profile I'm a Fan of ErnestineBass permalink

Too.

Much.

Corn.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:16 PM on 07/24/2008
- haleywins See Profile I'm a Fan of haleywins permalink

All states along the Mississippi River and Gulf Coast, need to create a partnership to protect the Gulf.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:58 PM on 07/24/2008
- sawdustinhershoes See Profile I'm a Fan of sawdustinhershoes permalink

that's right!! I don't think making out environment clean is impossible. In fact, there's a lot of business to be made with cleaning and properly maintaining our environment.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:05 PM on 07/24/2008
- londubh See Profile I'm a Fan of londubh permalink

Hello! The floodwaters from Iowa carried a lot more fertilizer runoff into the gulf. That's why the dead zone is bigger than before.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:11 AM on 07/24/2008
- ErnestineBass See Profile I'm a Fan of ErnestineBass permalink

BINGO! There seems to be a serious dearth of organic chemists here on HP.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:26 PM on 07/24/2008
- Egalitare See Profile I'm a Fan of Egalitare permalink

"dearth of organic chemists"....that thar is turrist talk, ain't it? AIN'T IT?

Admit it: yur jest Un'Mericun. We got th' right to foul up the entire Oshun if we wanna!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:36 AM on 07/25/2008
- loki See Profile I'm a Fan of loki permalink

sounds like mother nature is a Neo Con this year, and is trying trickle down economics. its killing in nature just like it does here in America.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:11 AM on 07/24/2008
- sher2x4 See Profile I'm a Fan of sher2x4 permalink

Didn't I just read somewhere that recently there was a oil spill in the delta.
Something like 400,000 gallon of oil.
Surely this can not be good for the gulf.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:01 AM on 07/24/2008
- dogbane See Profile I'm a Fan of dogbane permalink

"More than 400,000 gallons of thick industrial fuel oil spilled just upriver from the Crescent City Connection in the collision early Wednesday morning between a tanker and a barge being pulled by a tugboat. The oil spill, the largest on the Mississippi River in the New Orleans area in nearly a decade, halted shipping traffic on one of the nation's busiest waterways."

http://www.nola.com/news/index.ssf/2008/07/oil_spill_shuts_down_80_miles.html

raptor, over at ZS, says this:
"The master of the tug was not properly licensed so the tug owner as well as the master will face criminal charges and damages will run into the 100's of millions of dollars. The cost of the cleanup will be borne by the owners of the oil, tug owners, narge owners and ship owners. When their insurance and resources are exhausted the taxpayers will bear the cost.

This will mean delays in the shipment of grains, petroleum products, coal and similar bulk cargo.

Parts of the city now will have their water shut off and have less than 24 hours of water. We draw water from the river and purify it for the municipal water supplies. However, several water intakes are up river of the spill so we will not run out of water city wide."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:24 AM on 07/24/2008
- NTO08 See Profile I'm a Fan of NTO08 permalink

New Orleans takes another hit...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:59 AM on 07/25/2008
- coyote4 See Profile I'm a Fan of coyote4 permalink

Another Associated Press propaganda piece.

This is their explanation for why it happens. I.E: it's Mother Nature's problem as she does not mix her water properly.
--"The fresh water and salt water don't mix well, keeping oxygen from filtering through to the sea bottom, which causes problems for fish, shrimp, crabs and clams."

DEAD ZONES ARE CAUSED BY HUMAN POLLUTION

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:50 AM on 07/24/2008
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