2018 Dead Zone Forecast For Gulf Of Mexico - About Size Of Connecticut
In a statement released June 7, 2018, NOAA said scientific models suggest that this summers Gulf of Mexico hypoxic zone or dead zone will be approximately 5,780 square miles (14,760 square km), about the size of the U.S. state of Connecticut. Thats similar to the 33-year average of 5,460 square miles (14,140 square km), and smaller than 2017s Gulf dead zone which at 8,776 square miles (22,730 square km) was the largest measured since mapping began in 1985.
Hypoxic zones aka dead zones are areas in the ocean of such low oxygen concentration that animal life suffocates and dies. A dead zone forms in the Gulf of Mexico every summer. Nutrients from the Mississippi River watershed, particularly nitrogen and phosphorus, fertilize the Gulfs surface waters to create excessive amounts of algae. When the algae decomposes in the deepest parts of the ocean, it leads to oxygen distress and can kill organisms even in the Gulf of Mexicos richest waters. These low oxygen conditions threaten living resources including fish, shrimp and crabs, which humans depend upon for food and industry.
Even though NOAA is predicting an average dead zone this summer, the dead zone remains three times larger than the long-term target set by the Interagency Mississippi River and Gulf of Mexico Hypoxia Task Force, a group charged with reducing the Gulf dead zone.
Steve Thur is the director of NOAAs National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science. Thur said: "The Gulfs recurring summer hypoxic zone continues to put important habitats and valuable fisheries at risk. Although there has been some progress in reducing nutrients, the overall levels remain high and continue to strain the regions coastal economies. "
EDIT
http://earthsky.org/earth/gulf-of-mexico-2018-dead-zone-forecast