Hypoxic ocean zones an increasing reality
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By Les Blumenthal
McClatchy News
Monday, Mar 8, 2010
Lower levels of oxygen in the Earth's
oceans, particularly off the United States' Pacific Northwest coast,
could be another sign of fundamental changes linked to global climate
change, scientists say.
They warn that the oceans' complex undersea ecosystems and fragile food chains could be disrupted.
In some spots off Washington state and Oregon, the
almost complete absence of oxygen has left piles of Dungeness crab
carcasses littering the ocean floor, killed off 25-year-old sea stars,
crippled colonies of sea anemones and produced mats of potentially
noxious bacteria that thrive in such conditions.
Areas of hypoxia, or low oxygen, have long existed
in the deep ocean. These areas - in the Pacific, Atlantic and Indian
oceans - appear to be spreading, however, covering more square miles,
creeping toward the surface and in some places, such as the Pacific
Northwest, encroaching on the continental shelf within sight of the
coastline.
"The depletion of oxygen levels in all three oceans
is striking," said Gregory Johnson, an oceanographer with the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Seattle.
In some spots, such as off the Southern California
coast, oxygen levels have dropped roughly 20 percent over the past 25
years. Elsewhere, scientists say, oxygen levels might have declined by
one-third over 50 years.
"The real surprise is how this has become the new
norm," said Jack Barth, an oceanography professor at Oregon State
University. "We are seeing it year after year."
Barth and others say the changes are consistent with
current climate-change models. Previous studies have found that the
oceans are becoming more acidic as they absorb more carbon dioxide and
other greenhouse gases.
"If the Earth continues to warm, the expectation is
we will have lower and lower oxygen levels," said Francis Chan, a
marine researcher at Oregon State.
As ocean temperatures rise, the warmer water on the
surface acts as a cap, which interferes with the natural circulation
that normally allows deeper waters that are already oxygen-depleted to
reach the surface. It's on the surface where ocean waters are recharged
with oxygen from the air.
Commonly, ocean "dead zones" have been linked to
agricultural runoff and other pollution coming down major rivers such
as the Mississippi or the Columbia. One of the largest of the 400 or so
ocean dead zones is in the Gulf of Mexico, near the mouth of the
Mississippi.
However, scientists now say that some of these
areas, including those off the Northwest, apparently are linked to
broader changes in ocean oxygen levels.
The Pacific waters off Washington and Oregon face a double whammy as a result of ocean circulation.
Scientists have long known of a natural low-oxygen zone perched in the deeper water off the Northwest's continental shelf.
During the summer, northerly winds aided by the
Earth's rotation drive surface water away from the shore. This action
sucks oxygen-poor water to the surface in a process called upwelling.
Though the water that's pulled up from the depths is
poor in oxygen, it's rich in nutrients, which fertilize phytoplankton.
These microscopic organisms form the bottom of one of the richest ocean
food chains in the world. As they die, however, they sink and start to
decay. The decaying process uses oxygen, which depletes the oxygen
levels even more.
Southerly winds reverse the process in what's known as down-welling.
Changes in the wind and ocean circulation since 2002
have disrupted what had been a delicate balance between upwelling and
down-welling. Scientists now are discovering expanding low-oxygen zones
near shore.
"It is consistent with models of global warming, but
the time frame is too short to know whether it is a trend or a weather
phenomenon," Johnson said.
Others were slightly more definitive, quicker to
link the lower oxygen levels to global warming rather than to such
weather phenomena as El Nino or the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, a
shift in the weather that occurs every 20 to 30 years in the northern
oceans.
"It's a large disturbance in the ecosystem that
could have huge biological changes," said Steve Bograd, an
oceanographer at NOAA's Southwest Fisheries Science Center in Southern
California.
Bograd has been studying oxygen levels in the
California Current, which runs along the West Coast from the Canadian
border to Baja California and, some scientists think, eventually could
be affected by climate change.
So far, the worst hypoxic zone off the Northwest
coast was found in 2006. It covered nearly 1,200 square miles off
Newport, Ore., and according to Barth it was so close to shore you
could hit it with a baseball. The zone covered 80 percent of the water
column and lasted for an abnormally long four months.
Because of upwelling, some of the most fertile ocean
areas in the world are found off Washington and Oregon. Similar
upwelling occurs in only three other places, off the coast of Peru and
Chile, in an area stretching from northern Africa to Portugal and along
the Atlantic coast of South Africa and Namibia.
Scientists are unsure how low oxygen levels will
affect the ocean ecosystem. Bottom-dwelling species could be at the
greatest risk because they move slowly and might not be able to escape
the lower oxygen levels. Most fish can swim out of danger. Some
species, however, such as chinook salmon, may have to start swimming at
shallower depths than they're used to. Whether the low oxygen zones
will change salmon migration routes is unclear.
Some species, such as jellyfish, will like the
lower-oxygen water. Jumbo squid, usually found off Mexico and Central
America, can survive as oxygen levels decrease and now are found as far
north as Alaska.
"It's like an experiment," Chan said. "We are
pulling some things out of the food web and we will have to see what
happens. But if you pull enough things out, it could have a real
impact."
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