Hypoxic
Zone
22
July, 2013
Photosynthesis
by phytoplankton in surface waters of the ocean constitutes the base
of most marine food chains. As organic material derived from this
productivity (dead plankton, feces, etc.) sinks, microbes digest this
material and remove oxygen from the water (and add carbon dioxide).
In areas with a deep, stable water column, this leads to a midwater
oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) where the oxygen concentration is <10%
of that at the ocean’s surface, and pH is lower as well. The
world’s largest OMZ covers most of the eastern Pacific Ocean and is
associated with the highly productive California Current, Humboldt
(Peruvian-Chilean) Current and equatorial upwelling systems. The
depth of the upper boundary for the OMZs depends on latitude –
ranging from <200 m to >600 m.
Definitely
not a ‘dead zone,’ the OMZ is actually critical to marine
ecological processes. Its upper boundary is the daytime home of vast
numbers of zooplankton, small lantern fish and krill that avoid
visual predators by hiding in this dark region. At night these
organisms migrate to the surface to feed on phytoplankton. Although
the cold, hypoxic depths of the upper OMZ are hostile to most pelagic
predators, a variety of deep divers take advantage of this rich
daytime foraging ground. Such diving predators include tunas, sharks
and marine mammals. But these predators are limited by either low
oxygen, cold temperature or both and can remain in the upper OMZ for
only short periods (tens of minutes to several hours). The Humboldt
squid (Dosidicus gigas) may be the only major predator that can
tolerate the hostile conditions of the OMZ all day long.1
Midwater
Climate Change Impacts
During
2008 several studies indicated that the OMZ in the eastern Pacific
has expanded vertically since 1960, meaning that the 10% oxygen
boundary has moved closer to the surface, in some cases by as much as
100 m. This was documented in the Gulf of Alaska,2 in the Monterey
submarine canyon,3 off southern California4 and in the equatorial
region.5
Two
main explanations have been advanced for this global-scale change.
First, increasing sea-surface temperatures due to global warming have
increased stratification, which hinders mixing of atmospheric oxygen
into deeper waters. Changes in global wind patterns may have also
altered oceanic currents, potentially moving water with low-oxygen
into new areas. Second, primary productivity has increased in some
oceanic regions, increasing the amount of sinking organic material
feeding the midwater microbes responsible for the OMZ. One factor
driving increased productivity could be the rapidly increasing
deposition of atmospheric nitrogenous gasses into the world’s
oceans from agricultural fertilization and fossil-fuel emissions.6
Excess nitrogen can stimulate phytoplankton growth just as it
fertilizes crops on land.
Ecological
impacts
Expansion
of the OMZ will have many complex ecological effects. Hypoxic waters
will stress bottom-dwelling organisms that are unable to move. A
shallower OMZ will also bring the organisms that inhabit the upper
boundary of the OMZ closer to the surface during daytime, which might
make them more susceptible to aerobic, visual predators. Vertical
compression of the oxygen-rich habitat for pelagic predators may
increase their susceptibility to fishing pressure.7 There may be big
winners that can utilize the OMZ, particularly Humboldt squid. During
the last decade this species has expanded its range northward from
Baja California to southeast Alaska in parallel with OMZ
expansion.8-10
Current
research: Shoaling onto the shelf
As
stated in Moss Landing Marine Laboratories graduate Ashley Booth’s
thesis:
“Monitoring
of oxygen at the seawater intakes of the Monterey Bay Aquarium (17 m
depth) shows that pulses of cold, low-oxygen water often reach the
nearby inshore environment that includes kelp forest, rocky reefs,
and sandy spawning grounds for market squid (Booth 2011). Oxygen
concentrations can fall as low as 20% of that at the surface, a level
likely to be stressful to many resident organisms. The nearest source
of cold, low-oxygen water like this is more than 100 m deep in the
Monterey canyon. During the upwelling season (Spring and Summer)
this deep water is shallower and is brought inshore by tidally driven
internal waves (waves that travel on the boundary between water
layers of different temperatures). What we do not know is how
nearshore organisms might cope with such hypoxic events or how the
frequency or severity of hypoxic events might be changing in the face
of a shoaling OMZ in the canyon. These are all important questions
that have become the focus of new research in Monterey Bay.”
A
Stanford undergraduate research course started preliminary studies
directed at these issues in Spring 2009, and local researchers from
Stanford, MBARI, NOAA and Moss Landing Marine Labs have followed up
with a five-year proposal to the NOAA Coastal Hypoxia Research
Program. This team has also partnered with a group at Scripps
Institute of Oceanography, because they realized that similar hypoxic
events occur off La Jolla as well. Thus, intrusions of deep OMZ water
into nearshore environments may be an important phenomenon over much
of the California coast
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