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Zones of death are spreading in oceans due to global warming
We've been reading reports on the growing pollution of our oceans for such a long time, but, apparently nothing 'effective' is being done to correct this state of our affairs! What will it take for us to wake up to our mis-management of our habitat!? While this article blames Global Warming, we mustn't forget that the cause of Global Warming is uncontrolled industrial and agricultural pollution.
This report from Jonathan Leake, Environment Editor, Times online UK–
Marine dead zones, where fish and other sea life can suffocate from lack of oxygen, are spreading across the world’s tropical oceans, a study has warned.Researchers found that the warming of sea water through climate change is reducing its ability to carry dissolved oxygen, potentially turning swathes of the world’s oceans into marine graveyards.
The study, by scientists from some of the world’s most prestigious marine research institutes, warns that if global temperatures keep rising there could be “dramatic consequences” for marine life and for humans in communities that depend on the sea for a living.
Organisms such as fish, crabs, lobsters and prawns will die in such zones, warned Lothar Stramma of the Leibniz Institute of Marine Sciences in Kiel, Germany, who co-wrote the research paper with Janet Sprintall, a physical oceanographer at Scripps Institution of Oceanography in California.
In the study, published in the journal Science, they collated hundreds of oxygen concentration readings taken over the past 50 years in the Atlantic and Pacific over depths ranging from 985ft to 2,500ft.
“In the central and eastern tropical Atlantic and equatorial Pacific the oxygen-minimum zones appear to have expanded and intensified during the past 50 years,” Stramma said.
The researchers found that such regions now extend deeper into the oceans and closer to the surface. Fish and other sea life cannot survive in such waters, said Sprintall.
The researchers say the change is closely linked to rising sea water temperature. At 0C, one kilogram of sea water can hold about 10ml of dissolved oxygen but at 25C this falls to just 4ml.
This impact is amplified by a host of other factors. One of the most important is that parts of the eastern Atlantic, eastern Pacific and the Indian Ocean are naturally low in oxygen – so a small additional decline has a disproportionately greater effect.
Examples of partly dead zones include a stretch of the Pacific about 5,000 miles wide off the west coast of South America. Others are found off the west coasts of Africa and India.
Lisa Levin, professor of biological oceanography at Scripps, and a world expert on the expansion of oxygen depletion in the oceans, predicted that similar zones would eventually appear off California.
“Around the world there are already around 150 areas suffering from low or declining oxygen levels,” she said.
Many of these are close to coastlines where the main cause is not climate change but pollution, especially agricultural chemicals washed off the land. The nitrogen in such run-off effectively fertilises the sea, causing a sudden “bloom” of algae and other planktonic life.
As such organisms die they are decomposed by bacteria that multiply so fast they suck all the oxygen from the water.
A report by the United Nations Environment Programme found that such coastal dead zones have doubled in number since 1995, with some extending over 27,000 square miles, about the size of the Republic of Ireland.
Among the worst affected are the Baltic Sea, the Black Sea, and parts of the Mediterranean. Perhaps the biggest of all is found in the Gulf of Mexico, where the Mississippi carries thousands of tons of agrochemicals into the sea every year.
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May 21, 2008 at 06:34 am by Maireid Sullivan, 312 views, 8 comments
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Comments (8)
at 11:30 on May 21st, 2008
"What will it take for us to wake-up..." Unfortunately catastrophe.
at 21:20 on May 21st, 2008
Hello Moonwolf, I keep thinking we are like kids who have to be forced to clean up our room!
...but we don't yet have strong 'parental' guidance!
A great book was released in the mid-80s, – Self Parenting!
That concept should be updated to take on issues related to habitat management.
at 11:31 on May 21st, 2008
Maireid Sullivan.
at 13:48 on May 21st, 2008
The Vancouver Aquarium is dedicated to the environment and does a lot of great work with seal, sea lion, and otter research, education and rehabilitation. I'm proud that Vancouver has such a wonderful facility to support our oceans.
This lovely fella is an ambassador for otter awareness at the aquarium, and is very much adored by the visitors.
cindiaugustine has contributed a photo to this story.
at 21:18 on May 21st, 2008
Hello, cindiaugustine, I was so deeply inspired by the beauty of Vancouver and BC when I visited in 1997. My first full poetry cycle was inspired by my experience in the area surrounding Desolation Sound!
Management of the oceans must be global. I trust they are reaching out to other good organisations around the world!
at 15:29 on May 21st, 2008
Maireid Sullivan, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 21:19 on May 21st, 2008
Thank you, KristaFromVista
at 22:25 on May 22nd, 2008
Blue starfish found in inches of water at low tide off Saipan
Photo-Jack has contributed a photo to this story.