This
week we’re taking a look at a problematic summer tradition: hypoxic
dead zones. These are marine or aquatic areas that don’t have
enough oxygen to support life. The most famous is probably the dead
zone in the Gulf of Mexico. Let’s look at dead zones, how they
form, and what you can do to help prevent them.
The
most common cause of dead zones is excessive nutrient runoff.
Nutrients in this case are nitrogen and phosphorus, nutrients from
plants. The main source of this nutrient runoff is agriculture, but
it can also come from detergents, animal waste, and untreated sewage.
Gulf of Mexico dead zone (Digital Journal) |
The
nutrient overload leads to a sudden population boom in the local
algae community. It seems paradoxical that algae, which produces
oxygen, leads to an area without oxygen. First, when a large mat of
algae covers the water’s surface it prevents oxygenation at the
water/air interface. Then, when the algae dies and decomposes, that
is where the oxygen disappears to. Mobile critters like fish can move
to more oxygenated areas to survive, but something that can’t move
or is very slow like a starfish or sea urchin will suffocate unless
the situation clears up.
How a dead zone forms (Gulf Hypoxia) |
Sometimes
the algae bloom is of a type that produces toxins. Sometimes the
toxins cause fish kills. Shellfish can absorb the toxins through
filter feeding and pass them on to predators and people. Algae toxins
can even threaten public drinking water.
A closer look at an algae bloom (NOAA) |
How
can you help? Trying to stop non-point pollution seems hopeless, but
if everyone ups their game a little bit it adds up and makes a
difference. Simple steps you can take at home include limiting the
amount of fertilizer you use for your lawn and garden, cleaning up
after your pup, and washing your car in the grass rather than the
driveway or street. Reducing fertilizer use reduces the amount of
excess nitrogen and phosphorus washing into the storm drain and out
to sea. If you’re already doing that, buy organic produce which
doesn’t use any fertilizer or pesticide. Picking up your dog poop
keeps the nitrogen and phosphorus from that source out of the system
as well. Washing your car in the yard lets the phosphorus in the
detergent soak into the yard rather than washing into the storm
drain. Every little bit helps.
This week's information comes from the EPA.
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