PASCAGOULA, Miss. — Through mid-July,
scientists from NOAA's National Coast Data Development Center and the agency's
Fisheries Service at Stennis Space Center will look at data about dissolved
oxygen from the "dead zone" areas in the Gulf of Mexico.
The scientists believe the zone forms in June and stretches 5,000-square-miles
from the mouth of the Mississippi River toward the Texas coast.
The condition, known as hypoxia, occurs when the amount of dissolved oxygen in
the water is too low to support most marine life. The scientists say the trend
has increased dramatically since studies first began in the early 1980s.
Researchers believe the dead zone is caused by an influx of polluted freshwater
from the Mississippi and Atchafalaya rivers. Freshwater floats over salt water
and acts as a barrier to oxygen. Meanwhile, pollution flows from the rivers into
the Gulf, creating algae plumes that further choke off the oxygen.
"The science community is determined to find the causes and impacts of
hypoxia to marine life in the Gulf," said Gregory W. Withee, assistant
administrator for NOAA Satellite and Information Service, NCDDC's lead agency.
The scientists, aboard the NOAA vessel, Oregon II, will study the Gulf waters
from Brownsville, Texas, to the mouth of the Mississippi River. The team will
measure seawater temperatures, salinity, chlorophyll and dissolved oxygen levels
at more than 200 locations.
During its four-week study, the scientists will continually generate new maps
and provide that data on the Internet. The first map will look at the
continental shelf from Brownsville to Corpus Christi, Texas and the final maps
will look at the Texas-Louisiana coast.
Source: Associated Press