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NOAA MISSISSIPPI OFFICES PROVIDE
EARLY LOOK AT GULF OF MEXICO ‘DEAD ZONE’
July
13, 2004 — NOAA’s offices in Mississippi have formed a partnership
to provide near-real-time data about dissolved oxygen from the seasonal
hypoxic area, or "Dead
Zone," in the Gulf of Mexico. Hypoxia occurs when the amount
of dissolved oxygen in the water becomes too low to support most marine
life, including shrimp, crabs and fish. Through mid-July, scientists from
the NOAA National Coastal Data Development
Center and NOAA Fisheries at Stennis Space Center, Miss., will post
online maps of dissolved oxygen near the sea floor, from Texas to Louisiana.
(Click NOAA image for larger view of the ‘Dead Zone in the
Gulf of Mexico being studied. Click
here for high resolution version, which is a large file. Please credit
“NOAA.”)
Mostly a
summertime phenomenon, this low dissolved oxygen, or “dead zone”
begins to form in June and extends from the mouth of the Mississippi River
westward to Texas. Though hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico has appeared naturally
for thousands of years, its geographic area has increased significantly
since NOAA began measuring it in the early 1980s.
NOAA scientists believe this increase, attributed in part to the growing
use of nitrogen fertilizers in the Mississippi River watershed, has led
to a demand for more information about the causes and effects of hypoxia.
In 2001, NOAA scientists in Mississippi began the Hypoxia Watch Project,
which provides near-real-time, Web-based maps of dissolved oxygen near
the sea floor over the Texas-Louisiana continental shelf from mid-June
to mid-July.
“The science community needs to stay on the leading edge of finding
the causes and impacts of hypoxia to marine life in the Gulf. Hypoxia
Watch, and all the resulting data from this project, will help scientists
do just that,” said Gregory
W. Withee, assistant administrator for the NOAA
Satellites and Information Service, NCDDC’s parent agency.
Scientists aboard the NOAA research vessel, Oregon II, measure seawater
temperature, salinity, chlorophyll and dissolved oxygen at more than 200
locations throughout the region as the ship makes its way from Brownsville,
Texas, to the mouth of the Mississippi River. This environmental data
complements the main objective of a four-week cruise, called the Southeast
Area Monitoring and Assessment Program (SEAMAP)
Summer Groundfish Survey, which examines stocks of commercially important
fish in the Gulf.
"By
pulling together resources from across NOAA, we gain a better understanding
of how fish and other marine life are affected by their physical environment,"
said Bill Hogarth, assistant
administrator for NOAA Fisheries.
"This collaborative effort allows NOAA to provide the best scientific
information for the benefit of the American public."
SEAMAP is
a cooperative state, federal and university program that collects, manages
and disseminates fishery-independent data and information in the southeastern
United States. A scientist aboard the ship processes the measurements
from electronic dissolved oxygen sensors, checks the measurements with
chemical analyses of the seawater, then sends the data by e-mail to NCDDC
at Stennis Space Center every three to four days.
NOAA scientists transform the dissolved oxygen measurements into contour
maps, which identify areas of low oxygen, or hypoxia. During the cruise,
as the ship receives the data, NCDDC generates new maps and immediately
publishes them on the Web. The first map will cover the continental shelf
from Brownsville to Corpus Christi, with the final map covering the entire
Texas-Louisiana coast. Dissolved oxygen contour maps, maps of actual sampling
station locations, and corresponding sea
surface temperature and chlorophyll-a maps from the NOAA CoastWatch
program, will be available to the public. Maps are published every three
to four days from June 22 through July 20.
Scientists use these environmental data to understand the effects of the
physical environment on fish and other marine organisms. The dissolved
oxygen maps generated during the SEAMAP cruise also help NOAA scientists
plan the annual survey of the Gulf’s hypoxic zone, which is conducted
by the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium (LUMCON) in late July,
when the hypoxic zone is typically at its peak. Cooling waters and storms
in the fall mix up the water throughout the Gulf and restore normal oxygen
levels to the sea floor.
The NOAA CoastWatch Gulf
of Mexico Regional Node at Stennis Space Center developed the Hypoxia
Watch process. CoastWatch provides satellite imagery and other environmental
data to government decision makers and academic researchers.
The NOAA Satellites and Information Service is the nation’s primary
source of space-based oceanographic, meteorological and climate data.
It operates the nation’s environmental satellites, which are used
for ocean and weather observation and forecasting, climate monitoring
and other environmental applications. Some of the oceanographic applications
include sea-surface temperature for hurricane and weather forecasting
and sea-surface heights for El Niño prediction.
NOAA is dedicated
to enhancing economic security and national safety through the prediction
and research of weather and climate-related events and providing environmental
stewardship of the nation’s coastal and marine resources. NOAA is part
of the U.S. Department of Commerce.
Relevant
Web Sites
NOAA Hypoxia
Watch System for the Gulf of Mexico
NOAA
National Coastal Data Development Center
NOAA
Coastal Ecosystem Program
Media
Contact:
John Leslie, NOAA
Satellites and Information Service, (301) 457-5005
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