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16269


Date: July 09, 2019 at 19:04:14
From: Eve, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Giant dead zone in the GOM in large part due to Chicago pollution

URL: https://phys.org/news/2019-06-giant-dead-zone-gulf-mexico.html


There's a giant dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico thanks in large part to pollution from Chicago
by Tony Briscoe


Just off the coast of Louisiana, where the Mississippi River lets out into the Gulf of Mexico, an
enormous algae bloom, fueled by fertilizer from Midwestern farm fields and urban sewage, creates an
area so devoid of oxygen it's uninhabitable to most marine life every summer.


Nutrients like nitrogen from fertilizer and phosphorus from sewage act as a catalyst for algae growth.
While algae are the base of the food chain for some fish, when these green plumes proliferate beyond
what fish are capable of eating, their decomposition consumes much of the oxygen in the water.

This year, historic rains and flooding in the Midwest have roiled farm fields and overwhelmed sewer
systems, flushing a tremendous amount of nutrients into the Mississippi River and into the Gulf,
spurring a remarkable amount of algae. While the agricultural runoff from farms—exempted under the
Clean Water Act—is the main driver of the Gulf dead zone, Chicago's sewage is the largest single
source of phosphorus pollution.

The Stickney Water Reclamation Plant, which handles the waste of 2.3 million people in Chicago and
the Cook County suburbs, is the biggest single source in the entire region and drains into the
Mississippi River. According to the U.S. Geological Survey, agricultural sources in the watersheds of the
Mississippi River basin contribute more than 70% of the nitrogen and phosphorus, versus about 9% to
12% from urban sources.

"It's amazing how big the Illinois impact is on something that's 1,100 miles away," said Josh Mogerman
of the Natural Resources Defense Council, a nonprofit with offices in Chicago.

"I think there's less focus on it in Chicago because the (sewage) water is going the other way. We don't
interact with the water that we're shooting toward St. Louis and the Gulf of Mexico. If we're not bathing
in it, we're not going to the beach in it and we're certainly not drinking it, there's less of an awareness."

Climate scientists say this issue is only expected to get worse in the future as a wetter climate in the
Midwest—specifically one characterized by heavy rainfall in the winter and spring—creates more
runoff.

"From a runoff point of view, it's actually the worst-case scenario to get more heavy rain," said Jim
Angel, former Illinois state climatologist. "Those are the ones that really flush out the system. If you
have a generally wet period, it doesn't have much of an impact on the system. If you get 2-inch, 4-inch
rainfall events on saturated soils, you get the major flushing of the nutrients and get soil erosion as
well. You're really sending Illinois farmland down the river."



In the Great Lakes, excess nutrients are also increasingly becoming a problem. Lake Erie—the most
productive recreational fishery in the Great Lakes, which supplies drinking water to 11 million people—
experiences perennial algae blooms that have rendered about one-third of its waters unlivable for fish
and allowed bacteria to threaten potable water in communities like Toledo, Ohio. More recently, in Lake
Michigan, a dead zone in Green Bay has become a common occurrence, causing similar problems.

Last week, scientists with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and several research
universities announced that the so-called dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico is projected to be around
7,800 square miles, roughly the size of Massachusetts, the second largest on record behind 2017.

As in past years, the ensuing dead zone is expected to result in widespread die-offs and migration,
influencing the region's fishing and shrimping industry.

"The fish that can move leave the area," said Don Scavia, an aquatic ecologist at the University of
Michigan and collaborator on the NOAA forecast. "The organisms that live in the sediment—one of the
main food supplies for the fish—can't. They die. There's been videography down there showing dead
organisms, but most shrimp and fish that can swim completely leave the area. There are implications
for that. The energy it costs the shrimp to leave the area tends to make them smaller. They aggregate
in areas that make them easier to catch, so there's the threat of overfishing. The fishing fleets have to
go farther away to find them."

Globally, dead zones have been growing in ocean waters since the 1950s. Since then, these oxygen-
diminished areas have collectively expanded by an area about the size of the European Union,
according to researchers. The Gulf of Mexico dead zone is considered the world's largest.

From June 2018 to May 2019, the United States experienced the wettest 12 months on record, with
many of the hardest-hit areas in the Corn Belt: Iowa, Illinois, Nebraska and Missouri. Farmers in these
areas typically apply fertilizer in the fall, which is when the unseasonably wet weather began in the
Midwest. That was followed by a heavy winter snowpack and unrelenting spring rains.

Farmers and officials in Illinois and Missouri are desperately battling floodwaters along the Mississippi
River. They're also battling each other.

While the concentrations of nutrients in the Mississippi River basin weren't particularly remarkable, the
melting snow and spring rains poured into waterways, leading to record high river flows and delivering
an overall larger nutrient load to the Gulf of Mexico.

Based on river flow and nutrient data, the U.S. Geological Survey estimates the faster current carried
about 156,000 metric tons of nitrate (18% above average) and 25,300 metric tons of phosphorus (49%
above average) into the Gulf of Mexico in May alone.

Monitoring in August will confirm the actual size of this year's Gulf dead zone, but the projections have
some worried about runoff into the Great Lakes.

Lake Michigan's Green Bay, Lake Huron's Saginaw Bay and much of western Lake Erie have seen
considerable algae blooms from agriculture and urban wastewater. Lake Erie, specifically, has battled
with toxic algae blooms, which consist of cyanobacteria rather than plankton, and can taint drinking
water. The projection for the Erie bloom will be released in July.

"For a long time people said, 'You know, that's the shallow lake. That's where you expect it to happen.'
But to see an emerging and growing one in a bigger, deeper lake in Lake Michigan is really, really
concerning, and probably portends scary things for the whole system if we don't get to the root cause
of this pollution," said Mogerman, of the defense council.

"When you have lakes in Ohio and other places where you're walking your dog and it takes a couple of
gulps of lake water and ends up keeling over, you got a problem," Mogerman said. "That's something
that needs to be addressed. So, we need to be looking at the Gulf of Mexico and seeing the magnitude
of an individual algae outbreak. But we need to recognize this is a problem close to home. This is a
problem in Illinois River, Lake Michigan and all over our inland waterways."

Environmental groups have tried to tackle the issue of water pollution and its effect on the Gulf. A
coalition sued the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago over its share of
phosphorus pollution in local waterways, citing its faraway impacts on the Gulf. The litigation resulted
in a settlement in which the reclamation district agreed to upgrade its pollution controls at its largest
wastewater plants by 2030.

Environmental advocates have also worked to take on the larger hurdle: the tens of thousands of farms
throughout Illinois.

In collaboration with the agricultural industry, the defense council pushed to incentivize the use of
cover crops, plants like cereal rye that soak up water and nutrients during the off-season. Estimates
indicate the practice is only used on 700,000 acres of farmland or 3.2% of farmland statewide.

This year, Illinois became the second state in the nation to begin a pilot program aimed at trying to
financially encourage more farmers, starting with a goal of 50,000 acres in its first year. A similar
program in Iowa picked up traction last year, receiving applications for more than 170,000 additional
cover crop acres in 2018.

In a way, these cover crops could serve the same function as Illinois' bygone wetlands and prairie
grasses. But more steps will need to be taken.

Mogerman said officials need to find smart policies that look to nature as a model to address flooding
in urban and agricultural settings.

"Just like climate change, there's no one thing that is going to fix the algae apocalypse," he said.


Responses:
[16271]


16271


Date: July 10, 2019 at 00:59:40
From: Eve, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Giant dead zone in the GOM in large part due to Chicago pollution

URL: https://weather.com/news/news/2019-07-08-mississippi-closes-21-beaches-because-of-blue-green-algae-bloom


Mississippi Bans Swimming at All Gulf Beaches Because of Blue-Green Algae Bloom
By Ron Brackett2 days agoweather.com

00:52
Toxic Algae Closes All Beaches in Mississippi
All beaches on the Gulf Coast of Mississippi are closed for swimming due to toxic blue-
green algae.
At a Glance
The harmful cyanobacteria have been detected at all 21 Mississippi beaches.
Visitors have been warned to avoid contact with the water.
The blooms can cause health issues in humans.

All of Mississippi's 21 Gulf Coast beaches have been closed to swimming because of an
expanding toxic blue-green algae bloom.

The final two beaches that had remained open to swimming, Pascagoula Beach West and
Pascagoula Beach East, were closed on Sunday, the Mississippi Department of
Environmental Quality announced.

Visitors can still use the beaches, the MDEQ said, but they should avoid contact with the
water. The blue-green algae, known as cyanobacteria, can cause rashes, stomach cramps,
nausea, diarrhea and vomiting.

The cyanobacteria has been caused, in part, by the opening of the Bonnet Carre spillway,
27 miles upriver from New Orleans. For the first time in the spillway's 90-year history, it has
been opened twice because of flooding in the Mississippi River.

(MORE: Tropical Development in the Gulf of Mexico?)

The governors of Mississippi and Louisiana have asked for disaster declarations because of
the damage done to their states' fishing industries by the flooding. The flow of fresh water
reduces salinity, making it difficult for oysters to survive. The runoff also is rich in nutrients,
such as nitrogen and phosphorous, that causes the cyanobacteria to bloom. The blooms
deplete oxygen in the water, creating a "dead zone" that can result in fish kills and other
devastating effects.

So far, the levels of cyanobacteria being detected off Mississippi beaches have not reached
toxic levels, the Clarion Ledger reported. Still, state officials are advising against eating fish
or other seafood from water where the bloom is present.

The National Park Service said beaches along the barrier islands that are part of the
National Seashore have not been affected by the algae blooms.

Here is a list of the 21 closed beaches:

Hancock County — Lakeshore Beach, Buccaneer State Park Beach, Waveland Beach, Bay
St. Louis Beach

Harrison County — Pass Christian West Beach, Pass Christian Central Beach, Pass Christian
East Beach, Long Beach Beach, Gulfport Central Beach, Gulfport West Beach, Gulfport
Harbor Beach, East Courthouse Road Beach in Gulfport, Gulfport East Beach, Edgewater
Beach, Biloxi West Central Beach, Biloxi East Central Beach, Gulfport Harbor Beach

Jackson County — Front Beach in Ocean Springs, Shearwater Beach in Ocean Springs,
Pascagoula East, Pascagoula West


Responses:
None


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