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'Dead zone' in Gulf of Mexico smaller than predicted this year
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 29 - 07 - 2007


The oxygen-poor «dead zone» off the
Louisiana and Texas coasts is not quite as big as predicted
this year, but it is still the third-largest ever mapped, a
scientist said, according to AP.
Crabs, eels and other creatures usually found on the
bottom of the Gulf of Mexico are swimming in crowds on the
surface because there is too little oxygen in their usual
habitat, said Nancy Rabalais, chief scientist for northern
Gulf hypoxia studies.
«We very often see swarms of crabs, mostly blue crabs and
their close relatives, swimming at the surface when the
oxygen is low,» she wrote in an e-mail Saturday from a
research ship as it returned to Cocodrie from its annual
measurement trip.
Eels, which live in sediments 60 to 70 feet (18 to 21
meters) below the water surface, are an even less common
sight, she said.
The 7,900-square-mile (20,460-square-kilometer) area has
almost no oxygen, a condition called hypoxia. The
Louisiana-Texas dead zone is the world's second-largest
hypoxic area, she said.
This year's is about 7.5 percent smaller than what Eugene
Turner, Rabalais' husband and a professor of oceanography
and coastal sciences at Louisiana State University, had
predicted, judging by nitrogen content in the Mississippi
River watershed.
He had predicted it would be about 8,540 square miles
(22,120 square kilometers), which would have made it the
largest measured in at least 22 years. More storms than
normal may have reduced hypoxia by keeping the waters
roiled, Rabalais said.
Hypoxia occurs when fresh water pouring in from the
Mississippi River floats above the heavier salt water in
the Gulf. Algae die and fall to the bottom, where their
decay uses oxygen faster than it is brought down from the
surface. Eventually, the lower layer holds too little
oxygen for fish and other aquatic life.
Nitrogen, from sources including fertilizer, erosion and
sewage, speeds up the process by feeding algae.
The dead zone was larger in 2002 and 2001, when it covered
8,500 square miles (22,015 square kilometers) and 8,006
square miles (20,736 square kilometers) respectively, and
was almost as big in 1999. Scientists want to reduce the
zone to about 2,500 square miles (6,475 square kilometers).


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