Eels indication of suffocating Gulf Floor
source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/332971/title/Eels_point_to_suffocating_Gulf_floor
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- JanforGore
- added this
That’s the good news. The bad: Substantial portions of the affected Gulf weren’t just low in oxygen, but virtually devoid of it from the surface to the seafloor. And researchers could literally smell the problem, notes Nancy Rabalais, executive director of the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium, based in Chauvin. Where oxygen loss occurs at the seafloor, she reports, the sediment gurgles up hydrogen sulfide — a gas that carries the stench of rotten eggs to the surface.
Nor was this the only sign of a very perturbed environment.
As in past years, Rabalais and her colleagues spent time at sea this summer mapping oxygen levels (see below) at various depths across the northern Gulf. In July, Rabalais witnessed foot-long eels swimming at the surface. Normally they live in the Gulf sediment. Some seafloor-dwelling crabs also propelled themselves dozens of feet up to the surface to avoid suffocating.
“I have seen brown shrimp (not on this cruise) doing the same thing. They live in the mud as well,” she says. And for them to swim up 65 feet to avoid the suffocating bottom waters was an act of desperation, she says, because they would have been prime fish food all along the way.
Such sights attest to the severity of oxygen depletion, or hypoxia, that developed in some regions of this year's dead zone’s waters. As oxygen concentrations at the seafloor approach zero, the chemistry at this sediment-water interface shifts, releasing hydrogen sulfide. This poses a double whammy to aquatic life, Rabalais explains: Not only is there little or no oxygen present, but hydrogen sulfide can itself kill organisms that can’t swim away.
Even those that can move may develop subtle reproductive toxicity, Rabalais adds, pointing to work by Peter Thomas of the University of Texas at Austin’s Marine Science Institute in Port Aransas.
His team has studied croakers, a type of fish that can find itself living in oxygen-depleted waters. Initially, his team reported an absence of spawning — because affected croakers lacked mature eggs or sperm. More recently, Rabalais notes, his team “has showed that the low oxygen has led to some sex change in croakers that live in the area — turning females into males.”
More at the link
http://www.sciencenews.org/view/download/id/332990/name/Gulfs_2011_dead_zone
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- Community, Tech, Green, Earth Care, 2 more
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- tags:
- Environment, Biodiversity, Gulf of Mexico, marinelife, 6 more
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anatom
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Remember within a couple months of the spill when they said 75% of the oil had just disappeared? That was fun. Then lo and behold Joye and her researchers, wouldn't ya know it, found it at the bottom (covering hundreds of square miles) in a layer 4 to 6 inches deep? There it was -choking out whatever it covered. The problem with the 75% assertion was a little science rule called "the law of conservation" Yep I teach that to ninth graders.
- 10 months ago
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anatom
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Dusty_King
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anatom:
Thank you for : 1) being a teacher and 2) teaching the truth.
- 10 months ago
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Dusty_King
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coolplanet
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I see someone swooped in anonymously and voted down every post again.
I've given this a lot of thought and conclude that Current should eliminate voting down.
The only thing voting down accomplishes is ridicule.
When we go to the voting booth we don't have the option of voting a candidate down. All we can do is vote FOR a candidate.
A zero vote is bad enough without having to rub it in with -10 highlighted in red! - 10 months ago
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coolplanet
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JanforGore
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coolplanet:
You know there are paid shills here. It's what they do. If Current won't eliminate down voting we will have to come together and up vote their a**es out of here.
- 10 months ago
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JanforGore
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coolplanet
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Perhaps the eels are Nature's way off cleaning up the Gulf.
When I was a kid Lake Erie was officially declared dead. My family has a cottage on the lake and I remember during the 1970s that the only fish in Erie were carp and catfish. Then, suddenly, millions of eels infested the lake, coming from the Atlantic through the St. Lawrence seaway and remaining for 10 years. It was creepy!
But then, in the mid 1980s, the eels disappeared as mysteriously as they appeared and suddenly fish like rainbow trout and steelhead salmon returned. It was considered a miracle that lake Erie came back to life.
I give credit to the eels. - 10 months ago
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coolplanet
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Dusty_King
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coolplanet:
Weren't there Superfunds too, because of Jimmy Carter? Didn't on e of the Great Lakes get set on fire before it was cleaned up?
- 10 months ago
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Dusty_King
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coolplanet
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Dusty_King:
Actually that was the Kiahoga river in Cleveland feeding into lake Erie that burned in the early 70s.
And thanks for pointing out the huge role Jimmy Carter played in saving the Great Lakes! - 10 months ago
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coolplanet
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Gravity_Man
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Widespread Obesity is our canary in the microwave. When young people suffer hypoxia they begin cramming more food in their mouth => trying to get oxygen from their food. It doesn't work. Junk food is nutrient-deprived => ingested sugar CAUSES OXYGEN DEPRIVATION.
Anti-Life + Anti-Life = Obesity Double Whammy Barometer. The hypoxia is already at work in the human population, tipping point IMMINENT. MASS DIE-OFFS OF THE YOUNG COMING SOON.
- 10 months ago
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Gravity_Man
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Wyley_Wombat
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You cannot radically alter the biochemistry of the deep ocean environment and expect nothing to happen. I would not be surprised if biological problems occur for many years to come.
- 10 months ago
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Wyley_Wombat
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JanforGore
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Wyley_Wombat:
I agree, and since BP also let genetically altered bacteria into the Gulf to eat the oil as an experiment, who knows where that will lead down the line.
- 10 months ago
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JanforGore
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anatom
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Wyley_Wombat:
you are correct sir, it is an uncontrolled experiment. Food chain disruption takes many years to show its effect. The "dust" (oil) has to settle before effects are known. My guess is many species are being lost as we discuss right now. Problem is they are benthic, "ugly" species who don't matter to the masses. If they can't see it, they tend not to care.
- 10 months ago
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anatom