Man-Made "Dead Zone" In Gulf of Mexico the Size of Connecticut
Taco Cowboy writes Somewhere in the Gulf of Mexico there is a man-made "Dead Zone" the size of the State of Connecticut. Inside that "Dead Zone" the water contains no oxygen, or too little to support normal marine life, especially the bottom dwelling fish and shrimps. The "Dead Zone" measures about 5,000 square miles (13,000 square kilometers) [and] is caused by excess nutrient runoff from farms along the Mississippi River, which empties into the Gulf. The excess nutrients feed algae growth, which consumes oxygen when it works its way to the Gulf bottom. The Gulf dead zone, which fluctuates in size but measured 5,052 square miles this summer, is exceeded only by a similar zone in the Baltic Sea around Finland. The number of dead zones worldwide currently totals more than 550 and has been increasing for decades.
It is a life opportunity area. Give it a chance.
Why compare it to that small, Republican-run piece of shit state? That is, unless you are one of those piece of shit Republicans that hates the Earth and wants to see all animals die. That is the way of those xians. In this case, they're gloating over killing animals near Mexico and for destroying CT.
Democrats currently run Connecticut, not Republicans.
This has been going on for a long time. It's due to drainage of basically the Great Plains out into the Gulf. Lots of fixed nitrogen from fertilizers in that these days. That nitrogen stimulates a variety of organisms that also use oxygen. Which there really isn't all that much of in water.
The only way you are going to stop it is to find a different method of raising food for the world. Hint: current organic methods doesn't do it - too labor intensive and yields suffer.
Or you could have less people.
So the currents in the Gulf run east to west of the Mississippi River? The answer is no. So how does farming runoff into Ole Miss explain this? Could it possibly be that for the most part the entire coastline north of the dead zone is swamp, which is full of decomposing material?
We have gone forth and multiplied,
to the great detriment of our bluegreen, slightly elliptical, biosphere.
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.
Ernest Hemingway
To put this in perspective, 5,000 sq. mi. is a square about 71 miles on a side. Compare this to the total area of the Gulf (615,000 sq. mi) and you'll see this "dead zone" occupies just 0.8% of the Gulf. Is this something that needs addressing? Absolutely. But it's not some horrific cauldron of death like the headline tries to make it out to be.
In the end they will lay their freedom at our feet and say to us, Make us your slaves, but feed us. - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Damn you, Finns.
The Algae consumes CO2, and lots of it. And because it is in a 'dead-zone', that carbon sinks to the bottom and is stored away and not recycled by the food chain.
Maybe a ship load of iron should be dumped into this zone to enhance the effect?
Everything is bigger in Texas.
Apparently near it, too.
Humans pollute the world. That's just how it is, and I'll be dead before it becomes catastrophic, so meh.
... Connecticut
Only the size of Connecticut? So, nothing to worry about?
What a coincidence; there's a brain-dead zone in Connecticut, the size of Connecticut.
Star Trek transporters are just 3d printers.
There's also a dead zone in Connecticut the size of Connecticut.
" Inside that "Dead Zone" the water contain no oxygen"
Step 1. Find Connecticut-sized container
Step 2. Something something
Step 3. Profit.
Pretending this is my office full of bitter coworkers..
Why not harvest the algae and use it to make bio-diesel? That might cure two problems.
We already know about it; it's called Congress.
Table-ized A.I.
Of course the scientist not even a lead scientist in his area at lsu sampled these 5000 square miles counted life at the bottom. Oh wait no he didn't. In his "model" he states. Instead of a traditional interpolation-based approach, we use a simulation-based approach that yields more robust extent estimates and quantified uncertainty. This data was based on a short cruise through the area one summer. From that he has determined 5000 miles is near lifeless. Amazing. Simply amazing his powers as a scientist.
I also love this probability data. Total matches up with his news article. " Furthermore, adjustments are made to account for observational bias resulting from the use of different sampling instruments in different years. Our results suggest an increasing trend in hypoxic layer thickness (p = 0.05) from 1985 to 2011, but less than significant increases in volume (p = 0.12) and area (p = 0.42)."
Not until Jan 20, 2017
All that algae is sucking up CO2 and dying thus sequestering it at the bottom of the ocean. Just what environmentalists want.
If you read the article, it explains this "dead zone" is actually full of algae---in other words, it probably has more life in it than the entire surrounding area (in terms of number of organisms, concentration of organisms, total biomass, and so on). Maybe this is a good thing, maybe it's bad, maybe it's entirely indifferent, but it is not a "dead zone."
But of course if we described the zone honestly, we wouldn't be able to use it as environmentalist propaganda, now could we?
Liberty in your lifetime
no, wait.. that was the deepwater horizon oil spill. is the 9th available? no?
All good point. But you know...doom and gloom gets funding
have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
It has been known for a long time now that this has *nothing* to do with nitrogen. Nitrogen is never the limiting factor for algae growth. Neither is potassium. So, you have one major fertilizer to guess - yes, it is phosphorus.
Phosphorus runoff is *the* reason for dead-zones and algae blooms. Stop phosphorus runoff, and you fix one of the major problems we have today that not only affects The Gulf, but many of the sweet water lakes too.
The only way you are going to stop it is to find a different method of raising food for the world. Hint: current organic methods doesn't do it - too labor intensive and yields suffer.
Wrong on both points.
1. You do not have to stop using fertilizer if you prevent runoff from getting into rivers and lakes in sufficient quantities to cause problems. This means less ditches, more wetlands, and stop of draining wetlands to get substandard farmland.
2. If people had nothing but organic farming, we would certainly not run out of food. Even if yields were 50% lower (and they would not be), there would still be plenty of plant food to eat. Maybe meat would be more expensive and people would start only eating meat once a week, like 100+ years ago, but there certainly would be enough food to go around.
Secondly, even 100% pure organic farming using natural fertilizer does not solve the problem of phosphorus runoff.
Dead zones are hypoxic (low-oxygen) areas in the world's oceans and large lakes, caused by "excessive nutrient pollution from human activities coupled with other factors that deplete the oxygen required to support most marine life in bottom and near-bottom water.
Learn what the fuck something means for for making shit up. YOU and people like you is why the country is going down the shiter. Ignorant loud mouthed SOB.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
last week 400K Toledo OH. residents were not able to drink the water for 2 days (or more) due to toxin in the algae that turns the lake into green sludge. it's a freshwater problem as well.
Get up!
That makes our worse case 2500000 / 139000000 = 0.0179856115107914 or 0.17% of the worlds oceans. Is "killing" (more quotes) 0.17% of the ocean to feed the world with cheap and abundant food saving millions from starvation a good enough reason? I'm not one to judge! Who's to say what the value of 0.17% of the ocean in the middle of nowhere is worth!
What I think is a more pressing matter is the fact that the state of Connecticut has been used without going through the proper RFC process. How am I supposed to know how to accurately convert states of Connecticut to Pyramids of Giza or Olympic sized swimming pools. For that matter, I'm not even sure if I shouldn't' be comparing this to Libraries of Congress! It's 2014 people! We live in a society bound by laws! People have got to learn!
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...not to the shrimpers and other commercial fishermen of the Gulf. Sad and alarming, and all, but not news.
Or you can collect the nitrogen used in fertilizers before it gets to the ocean, or you can invent ways to use less of it. Do remember the seas are also a huge source of food. This kills the fish. ( I live in finland, baltic sea has been a big concers around here for many years already, currently it looks like we might be able to save it. A couple of big factories got modernised or closed in Russia just a while ago, that helped a lot. Now we have agriculture to improve. It's possible to limit the fields so that less nitrogen washes to rivers)
$13333 @ $79/hr is 168hrs 46mins 19.7 seconds. What kind of employer pays you in units of fractions of a second? Also, 168 hours a month is more than "a few hours". Hell, it's a 40 hour week.
I suspect your spam is dishonest and wish to speak to your supervisor.
Science is all about firing a drunk pig out of a cannon just to see what happens.
On the plus side, it's a very effective form of carbon sequestration. All that dead algae will sit on the ocean floor for millenia and eventually turn into oil.
Why is everything so doom and gloom with these people? And how do they know it's man-made? They don't, but they like to think that it is, that way they can try and control it via government, fees, taxes, etc. As the saying goes, just follow the money.
It isn't a dead zone.
Because algae is 'life'. So is all the stuff that feeds off the algae.
There's just nothing we can fish in to extinction.
"Consensus" in science is _always_ a political construct.
ah come on! these dead zones have been known for centuries. all rivers that flow into the sea have them if their big enough. the mere fact that the one in the gulf isn't shrinking is proof that man is not the primary cause. due to efforts in modern irrigation in the last half of the last century to prevent run off from farmlands it should have shrunk. that means naturally produced organic material is the main cause or,its climate change. ;)
produced oxygen. Doesn't it photosynthesize?
Certainly sounds like there is plenty of Algae there, which certainly isn't dead...
A more accurate description might be "Algae Zone" perhaps.
That's the staging point that the lizard people will use to invade the US.
You know where lies the other Dead Zone? In my bathroom.
Please stop posting pro obama crap. The article cites "scientists say". No linking to actual data. Show us your tits, I mean data.
The first one is sensible. The second is dumb.
Crops fail. Not often, but inevitably. Historically, this results in mass famine and death. If your society produces just enough food to survive, then it is extremely sensitive to disruption of the food supply. Overproduction of food is a buffer against famine, in case of a once-in-a-hundred-years spring blizzard, volcanic eruption, dust storms, vine blight, potato blight, or honeybee plague. Additionally, cheap foodstuffs correspond to a generally healthier diet. Contrariwise, expensive foodstuffs can result in starvation even when production is plentiful; during the Irish Famine, Ireland's food production actually increased by many measures. The people to whom it was exported were very grateful I am sure.
As an energy resource, food crops are remarkably counterproductive. Anyone who can call for the end of farm subsidies is a moron. It doesn't matter whether you're a free-marketard or simply ignorant of history: a stable, wholesome, and inexpensive food supply is one of the chief duties of the State.
http://www.bigpictureagriculture.com/2013/11/ted-talk-phosphorus-fertilizer-should-be-replaced-with-mycorrhizal-fungi-103.html
Let's oxygenate the water by building floating roombas that circulate air into the water, like tiny fountains.
Remember kids, if you're not paying for the service, YOU ARE THE PRODUCT THAT IS BEING SOLD.
buncha guys found out dead zone. who's gonna tell da Boss? we could both be sleepin wit da fishes...
if this is supposed to be a new economy, how come they still want my old fashioned money?
I don't suppose what has worked in aquariums for years would work in the ocean. Air's not that expensive. Pump some down to the bottom.
I have wondered if it could be profitable to run a barge and sein the top couple of feet of ocean water in the dead zones and recapture the plastic and other floating debris for recycling. Another thought: Even if we compressed it to a high degree and encase it in cement, then it could be made use of as artificial offshore reefs. Probably not practical, but if you have something that could make this stuff useful, you have enough material to do lots of stuff with! ... So what is YOUR idea of how to make it useful and get it out of the ocean ecosystem?
... "When you pry the source from my cold dead hands."