| Ocean "Dead Zones" Spread, Fish More at Risk - Study
NORWAY: October 1, 2008
OSLO - The number of polluted "dead zones" in the world's oceans is rising
fast and coastal fish stocks are more vulnerable to collapse than previously
feared, scientists said on Monday.
The spread of "dead zones" -- areas of oxygen-starved water -- "is emerging
as a major threat to coastal ecosystems globally," the scientists wrote in
the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Such zones are found from the Gulf of Mexico to the Baltic Sea in areas
where algae bloom and suck oxygen from the water, feeding on fertilisers
washed from fields, sewage, animal wastes and pollutants from the burning of
fossil fuels.
"Marine organisms are more vulnerable to low oxygen content than currently
recognised, with fish and crustaceans being the most vulnerable," said
Raquel Vaquer Suner of the Mediterranean Institute for Advanced Studies in
Spain.
"The number of reported hypoxic (low oxygen) zones is growing globally at a
rate of 5 percent a year," she told Reuters.
Her study with a colleague showed that the number of "dead zones" had risen
to more than 140 in 2004 from almost none until the late 1970s.
Hundreds of millions of people depend on coastal fisheries for food.
Crustaceans such as crabs, lobsters and shrimps are less able to escape from
low-oxygen waters than fish.
WARMING
Higher temperatures tied to global warming, blamed by the UN Climate Panel
on human use of fossil fuels, may aggravate the problem of "dead zones",
partly because oxygen dissolves less readily in warmer water, the study
said.
The first "dead zones" were found in northern latitudes such as Chesapeake
Bay on the US east coast and Scandinavian fjords. Others have been appearing
off South America, Ghana, China, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, Portugal and
Britain.
The study said that most scientists had until now reckoned that oxygen
levels could fall to 2 milligrams per litre of sea water before the water
was considered starved of oxygen.
But many creatures were far more sensitive. Larvae of one type of crab found
off eastern Canada and the United States started suffering at oxygen levels
of 8.6 mg per litre, just below normal levels.
"Currently used thresholds ... are not conservative enough to avoid
widespread mortality losses," the scientists wrote. They urged a revised
minimum of 4.6 mg of oxygen per litre as the lowest before water was
considered hostile to life. -- For Reuters latest environment blogs click
on: http://blogs.reuters.com/environment/ (Editing by Tim Pearce)
Story by Alister Doyle, Environment Correspondent
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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