BEIJING, July 19 (Xinhuanet) -- The recurring
oxygen-depleted "dead zone" off the Louisiana coast will grow to its largest
size in at least 22 years -- 8,543 square miles.
The prediction, released Monday by the Louisiana
Universities Marine Consortium, is based on a federal estimate of nitrogen from
the Mississippi River watershed into the Gulf of Mexico. It discounts the effect
storms might have.
The "dead zone" in the northern Gulf, at the end of
the Mississippi River system, is one of the largest areas of oxygen-depleted
coastal waters in the world. Low oxygen, or hypoxia, can be caused by pollution
from farm fertilizer, soil erosion and discharge from sewage treatment plants,
according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
Eugene Turner, a professor of oceanography and
coastal sciences at Louisiana State University who is involved with the report,
said it's tough to determine whether fish are dying because of hypoxia or other
factors, such as climatic effects.
However, "we really don't want to mess with this, to
make it worse," he said.
The pollution is carried downstream by the
Mississippi and comes from throughout the United States.
Excess nutrients can spur the growth of algae, and
when the algae die, their decay consumes oxygen faster than it can be brought
down from the surface. As a result, fish, shrimp and crabs can be forced to move
or die, the consortium website says.
The dead zone usually begins forming in the spring
and stays through summer and into the fall. Though the size of the dead zone has
shrunk some years, on average it has steadily grown larger, Turner said.
(Agencies)