Everything about Oxygen Depletion totally explained
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For other uses of the term "hypoxia", see hypoxia.
Hypoxia or
oxygen depletion is a phenomenon that occurs in aquatic environments as
dissolved oxygen (
DO; molecular oxygen dissolved in the water) becomes reduced in concentration to a point detrimental to aquatic organisms living in the system. Dissolved oxygen is typically expressed as a percentage of the oxygen that would dissolve in the water at the prevailing temperature and salinity (both of which affect the solubility of oxygen in water; see
oxygen saturation and
underwater). An aquatic system lacking dissolved oxygen (0% saturation) is termed anaerobic,
reducing, or
anoxic; a system with low DO concentration—in the range between 1 and 30% DO saturation—is called
hypoxic. Most fish can't live below 30% DO saturation. A "healthy" aquatic environment should seldom experience DO less than 80%.
Causes of hypoxia
Oxygen depletion could be the result of a number of factors including natural ones, but is of most concern as a consequence of
pollution and as an outcome of a process known as
eutrophication in which
plant nutrients enter a river, lake, or ocean,
phytoplankton blooms are encouraged. While phytoplankton, through photosynthesis, will raise DO saturation during daylight hours, the dense population of a
bloom reduces DO saturation during the night. When phytoplankton cells die, they sink towards the bottom and are decomposed by
bacteria, a process that further reduces DO in the water column. If oxygen depletion progresses to
hypoxia, fish kills can occur and invertebrates like
worms and
clams on the bottom may be killed as well.
Natural occurrences of hypoxia have been observed. Water flowing from a river into the sea is less dense than salt water. When this water doesn't mix with the underlying saline water, the oxygen concentration in the bottom layer may become low enough for hypoxia to occur. Hypoxia is particularly problematic in shallow waters of semi-enclosed bodies of water like the
Waddenzee or the
Gulf of Mexico where land runoff is substantial. In these areas, a so-called "
dead zone" can be created.
Hypoxia may also be the explanation for periodic phenomena such as the
Mobile Bay jubilee, where aquatic life suddenly rushes to the shallows, perhaps trying to escape oxygen-depleted water. Recent widespread shellfish kills near the coasts of Oregon and Washington are also blamed on cyclic
dead zone ecology.
Solutions
To combat hypoxia, it's essential to reduce the amount of land-derived nutrients reaching rivers in runoff. Defensively this can be done by improving sewage treatment and by reducing the amount of fertilizers leaching into the rivers. Offensively this can be done by restoring natural environments along a river; marshes are particularly effective in reducing the amount of phosphorus and nitrogen (nutrients) in water.
In a very short time the oxygen saturation can drop to zero when offshore blowing winds drive surface water out and anoxic depthwater rises up. At the same time a decline in temperature and a rise in salinity is observed (from the longterm ecological observatory in the seas at Kiel Fjord, Germany). New approaches of long-term monitoring of oxygen regime in the ocean observe online the behavior of fish and zooplankton, which changes drastically under reduced oxygen saturations (ecoSCOPE) and already at very low levels of water pollution.
Bog chemistry
In certain northern European
sphagnum acidic bogs, a condition of hypoxia arises that prevents tissue decay by impeding micro-organisms in the soil and groundwater. Remarkable preservation of human mummies has occurred in some cases such as the discovery of
Haraldskær Woman and
Tollund Man in
Jutland,
Denmark and
Lindow man in
Cheshire,
England.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Oxygen Depletion'.
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