Gulf of Mexico Dead Zone in Need of Bold New Approaches
08/02/2017

Scientists Nancy Rabalais and Matt Kupnick deploy an oxygen meter to measure oxygen concentrations within 1 foot of the seabed in the Gulf of Mexico. Rabalais has led the team measuring oxygen concentration in the bottom waters at more than 100 stations on 32 research cruises since 1985.
Photo Credit: R. Eugene Turner, LSU
BATON ROUGE – Shrinking the annual Gulf of Mexico Dead Zone down to the size of Delaware
will require a 59 percent reduction in the amount of nitrogen runoff that flows down
the Mississippi River from as far away as the Corn Belt. That’s the primary finding
of a new study that used four computer models to see what it would take to reach the
longstanding but elusive goal of cutting the size of the Gulf of Mexico summer hypoxic
zone — an area of low to no oxygen that can kill fish and other marine life — by more
than two-thirds.
In a paper published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
or PNAS, the researchers conclude that, while the goal is still attainable, reaching
it will require bold new approaches applied on a large scale in upstream agricultural
areas. Farmland runoff containing fertilizers and livestock waste is the main source
of the nitrogen and phosphorus that cause the Gulf of Mexico hypoxic zone, which is
also known as the “Dead Zone.”
The researchers use four computer models to predict the size of the Gulf of Mexico
hypoxic zone in June forecasts issued by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
or NOAA. NOAA’s 2017 Gulf of Mexico ensemble forecast predicted a dead zone of 8,185
square miles, or about the size of New Jersey, which would be the third largest on
record.
“By synthesizing information from multiple sources and computer models, we have developed
the most accurate predictions of the Dead Zone, which is located in one of the most
economically and environmentally important bodies of water for our country — the Gulf
of Mexico,” said co-author R. Eugene Turner, LSU Boyd Professor in the Department
of Oceanography & Coastal Sciences.
In their PNAS paper, the researchers point out that little progress has been made
in reducing either the nutrient levels in the rivers that empty into the Gulf of Mexico
or the size of the hypoxic zone itself.
In February 2015, the Mississippi River/Gulf of Mexico Watershed Nutrient Task Force,
a coalition of federal, state and tribal agencies, pushed to 2035 the goal of reducing
the Gulf’s hypoxic zone to 1,950 square miles. The most recent five-year average size
of the Gulf Dead Zone is 5,410 square miles, or 14,024 square kilometers. The Task
Force also agreed on an interim target of a 20 percent reduction in the amount of
nitrogen flowing into the Gulf of Mexico by 2025.
“The bottom line is that we will never reach the Action Plan’s goal of 1,950 square
miles until more serious actions are taken to reduce the loss of Midwest fertilizers
into the Mississippi River system,” said University of Michigan aquatic ecologist
Don Scavia, lead author of the PNAS paper.
River concentrations of the nitrate compound have not declined since the 1980s. And
the current five-year running average of the nitrate load delivered to the Gulf of
Mexico is not significantly different from the 1980-1996 baseline, despite the fact
that U.S. Farm Bill conservation programs spent more than $28 billion in the 20 Mississippi
Basin states since 1995.

Research scientist Matt Kupnick guides a water sampler equipped with multiple sensors onto the R/V Pelican in the Gulf of Mexico.
Photo Credit: R. Eugene Turner, LSU
“Clearly something more or something different is needed,” Scavia and his colleagues
wrote in PNAS. “It matters little if the load-reduction target is 30 percent, 45 percent
or 59 percent if insufficient resources are in place to make even modest reductions.”
Potential paths toward reducing levels of both nitrogen and phosphorus include altering
fertilizer application rates; using cover crops, or fast-growing crops planted to
prevent soil erosion; improving overall nutrient management; pursuing alternatives
to corn-based biofuels, and perennial plants cover.
“It is time to ask what is preventing more extensive implementation of some or all
of these strategies,” wrote the authors, who are based at LSU, University of Michigan,
North Carolina State University and the College of William & Mary.
In their modeling study, the researchers looked at the likely impacts of the 20 percent
nitrogen reduction and concluded that it would produce an 18 percent drop in dead
zone size over the long term, though it may not have a measurable effect in the next
five to 10 years. Although nitrogen has historically been considered the main nutrient
driver of hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico, a “dual-nutrient strategy” of reducing both
nitrogen and phosphorus appears to be the most prudent management approach, according
to Scavia and his co-authors.
The 59 percent nitrogen reduction needed to shrink the Dead Zone to the size of Delaware
is larger than the 45 percent cut called for in the Gulf Task Force’s Action Plan.
It is also higher than recommendations made for other systems suffering from high
nutrient levels, including Lake Erie and Chesapeake Bay.
Scavia and his colleagues say the new study marks the first time that multiple models
have been synthesized to develop a consensus estimate of how a hypoxic system will
respond to nutrient-load reductions. Uncertainties include the potential impacts of
climate change such as the frequency, intensity and timing of droughts and floods
that are expected to change across much of the U.S. and could affect both the timing
and the amount of nutrients delivered to the Gulf of Mexico.
Despite the uncertainties, the team’s results show that the hypoxia zone’s response
to nitrogen reductions “is robust across substantially different and independent models,
providing increased confidence that the load reduction proposed will achieve management
goals,” according to the authors.
Co-authors of the PNAS paper, “Ensemble modeling informs hypoxia management in the
northern Gulf of Mexico,” are R. Eugene Turner of LSU, University of Michigan’s Isabella
Bertani, Daniel Obenour and Alexey Katin of North Carolina State University and David
Forrest of the College of William & Mary.
The work was supported in part by grants from NOAA and the University of Michigan’s
Graham Sustainability Institute.
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Additional Link:
Ensemble modeling informs hypoxia management in the northern Gulf of Mexico, PNAS:
http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2017/07/27/1705293114
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University of Michigan News
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