NOAA announced Thursday that their annual measurement of the largest dead zone in U.S. waters, the Gulf of Mexico dead zone, is roughly the size of New Jersey.
A dead zone is an area where oxygen levels are so low that its waters are potentially deadly for marine life, NOAA said.
Located largely off the coast of Louisiana, the Gulf of Mexico dead zone forms every summer due to nutrient-rich runoff from the Mississippi River Basin and the explosive algae blooms they trigger, according to the EPA.
A team of scientists from Louisiana State University and Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium led this year’s survey from July 21-26. Their track and measurements can be seen in the map above.
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They found that the dead zone has grown this summer to be more than 6,700 square miles or more than 4 million acres of habitat, making it the 12th largest it has been in NOAA’s 38 years of measurements.
“The area of bottom-water hypoxia was larger than predicted by the Mississippi River discharge and nitrogen load for 2024, but within the range experienced over the nearly four decades that this research cruise has been conducted,” said Nancy Rabalais, Ph.D. professor at Louisiana State University and the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium and co-chief scientist for the survey cruise.
“We continue to be surprised each summer at the variability in size and distribution,” she added.
Dead zones are a significant factor in assessing the health of a marine ecosystem, along with the economic ramifications of an unhealthy or disrupted ecosystem.
As nutrient pollution in the water triggers algae overgrowth, the algae then die and deplete oxygen in the water as they decompose. NOAA said this oxygen depletion forces marine animals, such as fish and shrimp, to leave the area.
Scientists have also found that areas with low oxygen levels alter the lives of marine life that remain in those waters. NOAA noted that some of those changes involve the fish’s diets, growth rates, reproduction and habitat use. In turn, this impacts how many commercially harvested animals, such as shrimp, are available.
More than 500 dead zones exist throughout the world, according to the United Nations. These areas threaten tens of billions of dollars in economic costs each year.