Oregon
State University graduate student Anthony Kirincich works on instruments
to find a dead zone in the Pacific that suffocates sea life.
Mon, August 16, 2004
NEWPORT,
Oregon (AP) -- His hand on a toggle switch and his eyes on a computer
screen, Oregon State University graduate student Anthony Kirincich
uses an array of scientific instruments to probe the vibrant waters
of the Pacific.
He
is searching for the absence of life.
Standing
next to him in the cramped cabin of the research vessel Elakha,
postdoctoral researcher Francis Chan processes water samples, measuring
oxygen and the microscopic plants that are the foundation of the
food chain.
Both
are hunting for very low levels of oxygen, a sign of what scientists
call the Dead Zone. Researchers think the appearance of such an
area that cannot sustain life may be a sign of a fundamental change
in the Pacific.
"This
is definitely a cat-and-mouse game," because the dead zone keeps
ebbing to and from the shore and changing characteristics, Chan
said. "It really takes us almost daily trips to really pinpoint
the data."
Two
years ago when local fishermen started hauling up pots filled with
dead crabs, scientists figured out that a huge mass of sub-Arctic
water with very low levels of oxygen and high levels of nutrients
had welled up from the ocean's depths and settled in for the summer
on the Continental Shelf off central Oregon.
The
Dead Zone dissipated that fall, and based on 40 years of ocean monitoring
and local fishing lore, many thought they would never see it again.
This summer, the Dead Zone came back.
"What
I think we are seeing is a tipping of the balance of the ecosystem,"
said Jack Barth, a professor of oceanography at Oregon State University.
"We don't fully understand what the cause of that is. We have some
good ideas that it is related to some fundamental changes in circulation
and the source of water for the Oregon Continental Shelf."
There
are more than 30 man-caused dead zones -- scientists call them hypoxic
or low-oxygen events -- around the world in enclosed waters, including
Hood Canal in Puget Sound, the Mississippi River delta and Chesapeake
Bay.
There,
excess fertilizer from farm fields washing down rivers fuels a surge
in microscopic plants called phytoplankton. When they die, bacteria
decompose them, using up the oxygen in the water and leaving fish,
crabs and other sea life to suffocate.
Dead
zones in open water, like the one off Oregon, are rare and less
well understood. Others have been found off the coasts of Peru and
South Africa.
In
this case, a mass of deep ocean water was transported south from
the sub-Arctic region by a shift in the California Current and came
to rest on the Continental Shelf. Already low in oxygen from being
deep in the ocean, it lost even more when abundant phytoplankton
died and decomposed.
Though
Oregon's Dead Zone is relatively small, "It might be a window into
possibly important larger scale changes in the Pacific," said Jane
Lubchenco, professor of marine biology at OSU.
Barth
does not think it is related to El Nino, the ocean warming that
periodically hits the Pacific. It might, however, be related to
the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, a cyclic climate condition in the
northern Pacific that controls upwelling events. It is not behaving
as it has in the past -- scientists have noticed unusually warm
water and different wind patterns.
To
understand it better, the 54-foot (16.5-meter) Elakha -- Chinook
for sea otter -- goes out several times a week. On this day, water
samples Chan process from near the surface showed low oxygen, but
not Dead Zone low.
But
the readings on water temperature, dissolved oxygen, depth and salinity
coming from the instruments towed behind Elakha told a different
story. About five miles out, at a depth of about 45.7 meters (150
feet), the green line describing dissolved oxygen slid below the
threshold into the Dead Zone.
"This
is one of the most productive parts of the coast," said Chan. "There
are deep water fish that do fine with even hypoxic water. It's the
shallow-water fish that we worry about."
The
zone generally extends from Newport south to Florence, a distance
of about 80 kilometers (50 miles). On Tuesday, Elakha found it about
five miles offshore at a depth of about 45.7 meters (150 feet).
It lays on the bottom, about 37 meters (120 feet) thick, and extends
at least 16 kilometers (10 miles) out.
"Because
we think it is potentially a long-term change, to be absolutely
certain we need many years of observations," Barth said of the Dead
Zone. "We are still at the fundamental research level, but the impacts
could be quite large."
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