Environment A 'Dead Zone' in The Gulf of Mexico

The Helper

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Scientists Say Area That Cannot Support Some Marine Life Is Near Record Size

The "dead zone" in the Gulf of Mexico, an area on the seabed with too little oxygen to support fish, shrimp, crabs and other forms of marine life, is nearly the largest on record this year, about 8,000 square miles, researchers said this week.

Only the churning effects of Hurricane Dolly last week, they said, prevented the dead zone from being the largest ever.

The problem of hypoxia -- very low levels of dissolved oxygen -- is a downstream effect of fertilizers used for agriculture in the Mississippi River watershed. Nitrogen is the major culprit, flowing into the Gulf and spurring the growth of algae. Animals called zooplankton eat the algae, excreting pellets that sink to the bottom like tiny stones. This organic matter decays in a process that depletes the water of oxygen.

 
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Prometheus

Everything is mutable; nothing is sacred
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"Sir, be careful. There's a deadzone down there."
"Its okay, I have Verizon."
:D
 

Prometheus

Everything is mutable; nothing is sacred
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But you get service in the bottom of the gulf of mexico.
 

seph ir oth

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