Winds Blowing May Not Prevent Ocean 'Dead Zones' Growing
Sunday, August 17, 2014 - 09:40
in Earth & Climate
By Raquel Vaquer-Sunyer, Lund UniversityThe world’s oceans are plagued with the problem of “dead zones”, areas of high nutrients (such as nitrogen and phosphorus) in which plankton blooms cause a major reduction of oxygen levels in the water. Sea creatures need oxygen to breathe just as we do, and if oxygen levels fall low enough marine animals can suffocate. This commonly happens around coastlines where fertilisers are washed from fields into rivers and the sea, but also mid-ocean, where currents trap waters in gyres (large systems of rotating ocean currents). read more