Calendar
July 19
9am-12pm
Storm Drain Stenciling
If you are interested in volunteering, contact Matt Garmon at (708) 828-1448 or via email.
July 22, 5:30pm
Rain Barrel Workshop
WORKSHOP FULL
July 26, 10am
Rain Barrel Workshop
WORKSHOP FULL
July 26, 1pm
Rain Barrel Workshop
WORKSHOP FULL
August 4, 7pm
Rain Garden Workshop
by Stacy James, Water Resources Scientist with the
Prairie Rivers Network.
Normal Public Library Community Room
Aquatic Ecosystems
The Effects of Water Pollution
Water pollution caused by point source and non-point source pollution can have devastating effects on aquatic ecosystems.
One of the most apparent ways this happens involves an oversupply of Nitrogen being discharged into our rivers and streams.
This excess of Nitrogen is the result of an overuse of fertilizer. Fertilizer runoff comes from both commercial farms and
from private homeowners who fertilize their lawns. All of this runoff is concentrated into the Mississippi River and is
eventually washed out into the Gulf of Mexico. There, the Nitrogen and nutrient rich water cause great blooms of algae to
form. Once the algae die, they begin to decompose and the oxygen in the water is depleted until there is almost none left.
Because of this depletion, almost nothing can grow in this area of the Gulf of Mexico which is now called the "Dead Zone".
The zone is approximately the size of New Jersey, and there are no fish or other aquatic animals which can survive in this
area due to the oxygen depletion. For more information about the "Dead Zone" and the effects of water pollution
on aquatic ecosystems, read this article which was published in the New York Times:
A ‘Dead Zone’ Grows in the Gulf of Mexico
By Carol Kaesuk Yoon
It can stretch for 7,000 square miles off the coast of Louisiana, a vast expanse of ocean devoid of the region's usual rich
bounty of fish and shrimp, its bottom littered with the remains of crabs and worms unable to flee its suffocating grasp.
This is the Gulf of Mexico’s "dead zone," which last summer reached the size of the state of New Jersey.
Alarmed, the White House recently commissioned six teams of scientists to begin the first large-scale study of the area,
hoping for a remission or cure.
The dead zone, researchers say, is emblematic of the growing ills suffered by the planet's seas. Earlier this month, hundreds
of scientists, marking 1998 as the international Year of the Ocean, warned that unless action is taken, overfishing, coastal
development, and pollution will multiply the kinds of problems that already plague the gulf.
The trouble with the dead zone is that it lacks oxygen, scientists say, apparently because of pollution in the form of excess
nutrients flowing into the gulf from the Mississippi River. Animals in this smothering layer of water near the bottom of the
sea must flee or perish.
"You can swim and swim and not see any fish," said Dr. Nancy Rabalais, a marine scientist at Louisiana Universities
Marine Consortium who has dived in the zone. "Anything that can't move out eventually dies."
While scientists have yet to measure the impact of the zone on fishing yields, fishermen say they already feel its effects as
they are forced to travel ever farther to escape the zone’s barren limits.
"This is a very serious issue," said Jim Giattina, director of the Gulf of Mexico Program office at the Stennis Space
Center in Mississippi. Giattina said the gulf boasts an annual catch of 1.7 billion pounds of fish and shellfish, worth $26
billion. "We’ve seen what can happen in other places in the world," he said. "We don’t want to see
a collapse of this fishery."
In fact, researchers say, the problem of rising nutrient loads and accompanying decreases in oxygen, known as hypoxia, is becoming
ever more common in the coastal waters of the United States.
"Hypoxia in the gulf is a dramatic case," said Dr. Don Scavia, director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration’s Coastal Ocean Program and overseer of the ongoing scientific assessment, "but it’s symptomatic
of what’s happening coastally." More than half of the estuaries in the country experience oxygen depletion during the
summer, he said, and a third experience a complete loss of oxygen.
Dr. Rabalais and her team have led the research efforts to date on the dead zone, also known as the hypoxic, or low-oxygen,
zone. She and others involved in the new research initiative by the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy
presented their latest findings in December at a meeting of the American Geophysical Union, in San Francisco.
The scientists trace the trouble to high levels of nutrients, in particular nitrogen, that flow out of the Mississippi and
into the gulf. As in other coastal areas, these rich stores of nutrients feed algal populations which explode during the
summer, producing oxygen, as all plants do. This oxygen stays near the gulf's surface. However, these blooms eventually fall
to the ocean floor. When bacteria begin decomposing the dead algae, they deplete the oxygen from the ocean bottom, sometimes
to the point where none is left.
At the same time, the lighter fresh water flowing in from the river forms a discrete layer on top of the heavier, salty gulf
waters, keeping oxygen in the air from reaching and refreshing the hypoxic zone near the bottom of the sea.
Among the most compelling pieces of evidence are the maps researchers have made since 1985 of the hypoxic zone. Scientists
measure the zone each summer, when it reaches its peak. Dr. Rabalais carries out the work along with her colleague and husband
Dr. R. Eugene Turner, who is director of the Coastal Ecology Institute at Louisiana State University and who discovered the
zone in 1974.
In 1993, the team witnessed a grand natural experiment as the American Midwest was deluged and the Mississippi flooded, pouring
huge amounts of nutrient-rich runoff from waterlogged cities and agricultural lands into the gulf. That summer the hypoxic zone
doubled in size.
In contrast, 1988 was the year of a great drought in the Midwest, Turner said, and "the hypoxic zone was almost absent,"
adding: "That clearly shows the influence of the river is dominant."
The team of researchers has gathered corroborative evidence from mud cores taken from the seabed of the hypoxic zone, studying
algal and animal remains in the cores that are dated using radioisotopes. From these Turner and colleagues have been able to
infer the relative levels of algae and oxygen in the gulf for the past 200 years. They found an increase in the amount of algae
deposited, as well as a decrease in the animals that require high levels of oxygen and an increase in those that can tolerate
low levels, such as microscopic, one-celled creatures known as foraminifera.
The timing of the changes, said Turner, matches well the times of known increases in nutrients in the river, with levels lowest
early in the century and striking increases since the 1950s.
The timing also matches large increases in fertilizer use, suggesting farming as a key source of nitrogen in the river. In addition
a U.S. Geological Survey study estimated that more than half of the nitrogen reaching the gulf appears to come from agricultural
sources.
But farm fertilizers are not the only likely culprit. A report released in December by the Senate Agriculture Committee estimated
that 1.37 billion tons of manure was produced by livestock in the United States last year alone, much of it making its way to the
sea.
Despite the evidence, scientists remain reluctant to blame the dead zone entirely on farmers.
"We’re all fairly convinced that it’s going to be agriculture that’s going to have to kick in and change
to some degree to make a big difference," said William Battaglin, hydrologist at the Geological Survey, in Denver, and part
of a team tracking the sources of nitrogen in the Mississippi River Basin. "But we don’t want to point the finger at
the farmer unless we‷re absolutely sure. He’s the one that's going to suffer."
Agriculture, researchers are quick to note, is not the only source of nitrogen in the river, which drains 31 states from Montana
to New Mexico to New York, including nearly every state between the Rockies and the Appalachians. Sewage treatment waste water,
industrial wastes, and atmospheric pollutants all contribute nitrogen to the Mississippi.
At the same time, difficult questions remain.
Despite the significantly decreased flow of the Mississippi since the great flood of 1993, the dead zone has grown to essentially
the same size every summer. But Dr. Rabalais says there may be explanations for that. Theoretical models predicted a large dead
zone in 1994, the first year after the flood, and every year since then the gulf has been hit with either floodwaters or pulses
of water from the river at just the right time to boost growth of the algae, making it impossible to say with absolute certainty
that the flood of 1993 caused the explosive growth of dead zone.
"I haven’t had a normal year since 1994," Dr. Rabalais said. "The gulf is an uncontrolled experiment."
In addition, researchers say that while the growth of algae and the hypoxic zone appear to be controlled largely by nitrogen,
complicating roles are now known to be played by silica from rocks and phosphorus from municipal waste waters and fertilizers.
But their influence remain less well understood.
Another risk with increasing nutrient loads is an increase in harmful algal blooms, like those seen with Pfisteria and Pseudo-nitzschia,
the algae causing amnesic shellfish poisoning, an illness that can result in permanent memory loss. Dr. Quay Dortch, an oceanographer
at the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium, said she has already found blooms of toxic Pseudo-nitzschia in the gulf.
"These are the highest concentrations of this organism registered anywhere," Dr. Dortch said of the Pseudo-nitzschia
found in the plume of the Mississippi. She said they reach their peak when the river’s flow into the gulf peaks. To her
surprise, there has been no documented harm so far to humans from these blooms, leaving Pseudo-nitzschia in the gulf "a
potential threat."
Though researchers agree that cutting the levels of nutrients in the river is the way to tame the hypoxic zone, the best method to do so
remains unclear.
For example, Scavia said, though much of the nitrogen appears to be coming from the middle Mississippi, a region including
Illinois and parts of Iowa, that region may not be the best one to try to control first. "It’s pretty far from the
gulf," he said. "It may be more appropriate and feasible to control lesser loads in other places."
Until researchers know more, Scavia and others say they are working to find changes that benefit farmers and the gulf. For
example, Giattina said, farmers could turn riverside land into wetland reserves, receiving compensation at the same time that
they create a buffer that reduces the nutrient load draining out of the area. Such federal and state programs to protect riverside
land are now being considered in a number of areas that have water quality problems linked to agriculture.
In the meantime, each summer brings on a new dead zone that blots out vast stretches of ocean, driving away fish, shrimp, and
the people searching for them.
Cynthia Sarthou, campaign director for the Gulf Restoration Network, in New Orleans, said: "If there was a dead zone 6 to 7,000
square miles in the middle of Iowa, people would sit up and take notice. This is a problem that needs to be solved."
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