|
|
 |
 |
Dead
zones off Oregon and Washington likely tied to global warming,
study says
Low-oxygen
areas that show scant signs of sea life have expanded. 'We
seem to have crossed a tipping point,' a scientist says
|
By Kenneth Weiss
Los Angeles Times
February 15 2008
NEWPORT, ORE. -- -- Peering into the murky depths, Jane
Lubchenco searched for sea life, but all she saw were signs
of death.
Video images scanned from the seafloor revealed a boneyard
of crab skeletons, dead fish and other marine life smothered
under a white mat of bacteria. At times, the camera's
unblinking eye revealed nothing at all -- a barren undersea
desert in waters renowned for their bounty of Dungeness
crabs and fat rockfish.
"We couldn't believe our eyes," Lubchenco said,
recalling her initial impression of the carnage brought
about by oxygen-starved waters. "It was so overwhelming
and depressing. It appeared that everything that couldn't
swim or scuttle away had died."
Upon further study, Lubchenco and other marine ecologists at
Oregon State University concluded that that the undersea
plague appears to be a symptom of global warming. In a study
released today in the journal Science, the researchers note
how these low-oxygen waters have expanded north into
Washington and crept south as far as the California state
line. And, they appear to be as regular as the tides, a
lethal cycle that has repeated itself every summer and fall
since 2002.
"We seem to have crossed a tipping point,"
Lubchenco said. "Low-oxygen zones off the Northwest
coast appear to be the new normal."
Although scientists continue to amass data and tease out the
details, all signs in the search for a cause point to
stronger winds associated with a warming planet.
If this theory holds up, it means that global warming and
the build-up of heat-trapping gases are bringing about
oceanic changes beyond those previously documented: a rise
in sea level, more acidic ocean water and the bleaching of
coral reefs.
Low-oxygen dead zones, which have doubled in number every
decade and exist around the world, have a variety of causes.
A massive dead zone off Louisiana is created each spring by
a slurry of nutrient-rich farm runoff and sewage that flows
out the Mississippi River, causing algae to bloom riotously,
die and drift to the bottom to decompose. Bacteria then take
over. In the process of breaking down the plant matter, they
suck the oxygen out of the seawater, making it unable to
support most forms of sea life.
Off Oregon, the dead zone appears to form because of changes
in atmospheric conditions that create the oceanic river of
nutrient-rich waters known as the California Current.
The California Current along the West Coast and the similar
Humboldt Current off Peru and Benguela Current off South
Africa are rarities. These powerful currents account for
only about 1% of the world's oceans but produce 20% of the
world's fisheries.
Their productivity comes from wind-driven upwelling of
nutrient-rich waters from the deep. When those waters reach
the surface and hit sunlight, tiny ocean plants known as
phytoplankton bloom, creating food for small fish and
shellfish that in turn feed larger marine animals up the
food chain.
What's happening off Oregon, scientists believe, is that as
land heats up, winds grow stronger and more persistent.
Because the winds don't go slack as they used to do, the
upwelling is prolonged, producing a surplus of phytoplankton
that isn't consumed and ultimately dies, drifts down to the
seafloor and rots.
"It fits a pattern that we're seeing in the Benguela
Current," said Andrew Bakun, a professor at the
University of Miami's Pew Institute for Ocean Science who
wasn't part of the Oregon study. "It's reasonable to
think these hypoxic and anoxic zones will increase as more
greenhouse gases build up in the atmosphere."
The Benguela Current has seen sporadic dead zones. There,
rotting clumps of algae have also released clouds of
hydrogen sulfide gas that smell like rotten eggs and poison
sea life. Residents along the coast of South Africa and
Namibia have witnessed waves of rock lobsters crawl onto
shore to escape the noxious gases.
Bakun considers the Benguela, the world's most powerful
current, to be a harbinger of changes in other currents. His
theory is that warm, rising air over the land makes
upwelling more frequent and more intense. The phenomenon, he
said, is complicated by decades of heavy fishing that has
reduced schools of sardines to a tiny fraction of their
former abundance.
Not enough fish remain to consume phytoplankton before it
dies and settles on the bottom, creating an anoxic dead
zone.
Crab fisherman were the first to take note of Oregon's dead
zone. Al Pazar recalls his alarm in 2002 when he pulled up
his traps and found something seriously amiss.
"It was a good amount of crabs," Pazar said.
"But they were dead, or dying or very, very weak. Those
that we managed to keep alive didn't survive for long."
The fishermen called Oregon State, which dispatched a boat
of researchers to investigate.
"It was a big mystery," Lubchenco said. "We
didn't know what was killing them."
Fishermen found other oddities. As they pulled up their crab
traps, they found baby octopuses, about the size of silver
dollars, inching their way up the lines toward the buoys
floating on the surface.
"I'd tell my crewmen, be careful with these cute little
things," said Dennis Krulich, a longtime fishermen in
Newport. "Peel them off the rope, and we'll put them
back."
Only later did he realize that these babies were coming up
from oxygen-depleted waters that hover near the seafloor,
climbing to save their lives. "In 30 years of crabbing,
I'd never seen anything like it before, Krulich said.
"It's spooky, this dead-zone thing."
The size of the zone has fluctuated over the years. In 2006,
it was the largest ever measured, covering an expanse
slightly larger than Rhode Island.
Last year, it was smaller but detected over a longer stretch
of coastline.
To make sure the phenomenon was actually new, Oregon State
marine ecologist Francis Chan reconstructed data from water
sampling at 3,100 stations dating to 1950.
He found that low-oxygen areas have long existed in deeper
waters, but there was virtually no evidence until recently
of hypoxic waters in prime fishing waters, which extend down
to 165 feet.
"It's pretty clear this is unprecedented," Chan
said. "It's never been detected since we began to
measure oxygen levels."
So far, the seasonal dead zones, which begin as early as
June and wrap up in September, have not hurt the crab
fishery, which mostly operates in the winter. Many crabs and
fish manage to flee the low-oxygen area. And fishermen have
learned to set their traps in the wasteland of the previous
year's dead zones, to catch crabs that return to feed on the
detritus of all the suffocated animals.
Scientists say seafood caught in low-oxygen zones is not
harmful to eat.
ken.weiss@latimes.com
|
Copyright 1999-2008, California Coastal Coalition
Phone: (760) 944-3564
|
|
|
 |