Plumes of
oil and methane could cause Gulf dead zones
A new
simulation of oil and methane leaked into the Gulf of Mexico suggests that deep hypoxic zones or “dead
zones” could
form near the source of the pollution. The research investigates five
scenarios
of oil and methane plumes at different depths and incorporates an
estimated
rate of flow from the Deepwater Horizon spill, which released oil and
methane
gas into the Gulf from April to mid July of this year.
A
scientific paper on the research has been accepted
for publication by Geophysical Research Letters, a journal of the
American
Geophysical Union.
Scientists
at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) and PrincetonUniversity conducted the research. Based on their
simulations,
they conclude that the ocean hypoxia or toxic concentrations of
dissolved oil
arising from the Deepwater Horizon blowout are likely to be “locally
significant but regionally confined to the northern Gulf of Mexico.”
A hypoxic
or “dead” zone is a region of ocean where
oxygen levels have dropped too low to support most forms of life,
typically
because microbes consuming a glut of nutrients in the water use up the
local
oxygen as they consume the material.
Dr. Robert
Hallberg Co -author
NOAA Geophysical
Fluid
Dynamics Laboratory
“According to our
simulations, these hypoxic areas will be peaking in October. Oxygen
drawdown
will go away slowly, as the tainted water is mixed with Gulf waters
that
weren’t affected. We’re estimating a couple of years before the dead
zone has
dissipated.”
Alistair
Adcroft Co -author
PrincetonUniversity and the
NOAA Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory
“Although the
Princeton-NOAA study was carried out when the flow rate from the
Deepwater
Horizon spill was still underestimated, the simulated leak lasted
longer than
did the actual spill. Consequently the overall impact on oxygen turns
out to be
about the same as would be expected from the Deepwater Horizon spill.”
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