Ocean ‘dead zones’ becoming global problem
WASHINGTON (AP)
Like a chronic disease spreading through the body, “dead zones” with
too little oxygen for life are expanding in the world’s oceans.
A graduate student researches ocean “dead zones” with a monitoring
device off the coast of Oregon.
“We have to realize that hypoxia is not a local problem,” said Robert
J.
Diaz of the Virginia Institute of Marine Science. “It is a global
problem, and it has severe consequences for ecosystems.” “It’s getting
to be a problem of such a magnitude that it is starting to affect the
resources that we pull out of the sea to feed ourselves,” he added.
Diaz and co-author Rutger Rosenberg report in Friday’s edition of the
journal Science that there are now more than 400 dead zones around the
world, double what the United Nations reported just two years ago.
“If we screw up the energy flow within our systems, we could end up
with no crabs, no shrimp, no fish. That is where these dead zones are
heading unless we stop their growth,” Diaz said.
He said the newest dead areas are being found in the Southern
Hemisphere: South America, Africa, parts of Asia.
Some of the increase is because of the discovery of low-oxygen areas
that may have existed for years and are just being found, he said, but
others are actually new.
Pollution-fed algae, which deprive other living marine life of
oxygen, are the cause of most of the world’s dead zones. Scientists
mainly blame fertilizer and other farm runoff, sewage and fossil-fuel
burning.
Diaz and Rosenberg, of the University of Gothenburg in Sweden,
conclude that it would be unrealistic to try to go back to
pre-industrial levels of runoff.
“Farmers aren’t doing this on purpose,” Diaz said. “The farmers would
certainly prefer to have their [fertilizer] on the land rather than
floating down the river.”
He said he hopes that as fertilizers become more and more expensive,
farmers will begin seriously looking at ways to retain them on the land.
New low-oxygen areas have been reported in Samish Bay of Puget Sound,
Yaquina Bay in Oregon, prawn culture ponds in Taiwan, the San Martin
River in northern Spain and some fjords in Norway, Diaz said.
A portion of Big Glory Bay in New Zealand became hypoxic after salmon
farming cages were set up but began recovering when the cages were
moved, he said.
A dead zone has been newly reported off the mouth of the Yangtze
River in China, Diaz said, but the area has probably been hypoxic since
the 1950s.
“We just didn’t know about it,” he said.
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’s 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.
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