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MarkC
08-04-2004, 09:26 AM
From the ABC web site - a bit of a worry!

A huge "dead zone" of water so devoid of oxygen that sea life cannot live in it has spread across the Gulf of Mexico in what has become an annual occurrence caused by pollution.

The 15,020 square kilometres of uninhabitable water may be contributing indirectly to an unusual spate of shark bites along the Texas coast, experts say.

A scientist at the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium said measurements showed the dead zone extended from the mouth of the Mississippi River in south-eastern Louisiana 400 km west to near the Texas border and was closer to shore than usual because winds and currents.

"Fish and swimming crabs escape [from the dead zone]," said Nancy Rabalais, the consortium's chief scientist for hypoxia, or low oxygen research.

"Anything else dies."

In the past 30 years, the dead zone has become an annual summer phenomenon, fed by the rising use of nitrate-based fertilisers by farmers in the Mississippi watershed, Ms Rabalais said.

The nitrates, carried into the gulf's warm summer waters by the river, feed algae blooms that use up oxygen and make the water uninhabitable.

The dead zone's size has varied each year depending on weather conditions, but averages about 12,950 sq km and remains in place until late September or early October.

Virtually nothing is being done to stop the flow of nitrates into the river, meaning the dead zone will reappear every year, Ms Rabalais said.

The dead zone forces fish to seek better water, which may be a reason for the recent shark bites on Texas beaches.

Three people have been bitten by sharks along the upper Texas coast this year, a high number for a state that has recorded only 18 shark attacks since 1980.

Terry Stelly, an ecosystem biologist with the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, said increasing numbers of sharks have been found in recent years in the waters along the Texas-Louisiana border, near the edge of the dead zone.

Along with other factors, "chances are good they [sharks] were looking for higher dissolved oxygen in the water", he said.

Ms Rabalais agreed, saying: "The higher number of sharks in shallow waters may very likely be due to the low oxygen being close to the shore at the time of the attacks.

"The available habitat for the sharks is definitely less when the low oxygen is so widespread," she said.

--Reuters

Garrett Lowell
08-04-2004, 09:27 AM
We have the same "phenomenon" in the Chesapeake Bay.

Jamie Hascall
08-04-2004, 01:43 PM
And Washington's Hood Canal.(It's a finger of Puget sound, not a true canal).

Jim H
08-04-2004, 02:36 PM
Those shark bites were caused by people swimming in close proximity to baitfish. We don't have much in the way of "surf" so you can see large shoals of mullet swimming right up to the shoreline. Blacktip, Sand, Bull and Tiger sharks can be found feeding on bait fish right where people are swimming. Texas' state record Tiger shark was caught off of a Matagorda beach.

ahp
08-04-2004, 05:41 PM
There is another dead zone in the Bay of Florida, between the Keys and the southern tip of Florida. The reason given is that in summer the water becomes hypersaline. The water is shallow and in summer there is a great deal of evaporation. Until recently fresh water percolating south out of the Everglades has offset the evaporation. In recent years so much freshwater has been withdrawn from the Everglades and Lake Okeecobee for agriculture and urban users that very little freshwater percolates into the Bay of Florida.

Wild Wassa
08-04-2004, 06:45 PM
The Jelly fish problems that are occurring around the world, the best reports that I’ve seen have been about the East Coast of the US, appear to be reaching plague proportions, making the use of infested areas most unpleasant, so I was reading. One report that I saw, blamed over fishing, another blamed urban run-off and the release of ballast and bilge water. We won't be happy until we have ruined it all then we can move on to colonize another dead planet.

Some of the increase in shark attacks can be blamed directly on marine research. The guys studying sharks, burley the waters to attract sharks, this make it easier for them to carry out research, as the sharks appear more often. This quickens the research and lowers research costs. Sharks are now, more than before, equating the presence of humans to an easily acquired food source. This is a twist, as a lot of research has been based around building an understanding of shark behaviour ... which is meant to save lives.

Warren.

[ 08-04-2004, 07:11 PM: Message edited by: Wild Wassa ]

TimH
08-09-2004, 10:07 PM
nice.

NormMessinger
08-09-2004, 11:03 PM
EARTH FIRST

We can mess up the other planets later.

TimH
08-12-2004, 02:23 PM
There are more than 30 man-caused dead zones - scientists call them hypoxic or low-oxygen events - around the world in enclosed waters, including Hood Canal in Puget Sound, the Mississippi River delta and Chesapeake Bay.

Dead Zone (http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apscience_story.asp?category=1501&slug=Ocean%20Dead%20Zone)