Hypoxia Dead Zone Measured to be Smaller this Year
August 4, 2020

Mississippi River discharge and nitrogen loads were high in May, which led to a prediction of a large area of bottom-water hypoxia (estimated at 17,500 to 20,000 square kilometers) if no storms occurred.
This summer’s Dead Zone size was the third smallest area since mapping began in 1985. The average hypoxic zone size over 2015 to 2020 is 5,407 square miles (14,000 square kilometers) (about three times the size of the Hypoxia Task Force five-year goal reduction of 1,930 square miles (5,000 square kilometers). This size of this summer’s Dead Zone is close to the Task Force goal, but not because of a reduction in nitrogen loading, but because of weather conditions.
The LSU forecast on 2020 size (https://gulfhypoxia.net/research/shelfwide-cruise/?y=2020&p=hypoxia_fc) included a caveat about tropical storms or other wind and wave disturbances. If storms occur just before or during the cruise, then the predicted size was estimated to be 30% (i.e., reduced to 14,000 square kilometers).

Map of bottom-water dissolved oxygen concentrations. The combined less than 2 mg l-1 and 1 mg l-1 are the darkest colors and outlined by the black line.
Storm’s high winds and waves affected all coastal Louisiana and disrupted hypoxia by mixing the water column from the surface down to May N loadCruise about 65 feet. The persistent winds from the south generated downwelling favorable conditions pushing what remained of the hypoxic water mass into deeper, offshore waters.
The nitrogen loading of the Mississippi River to offshore remains high. There are efforts, however, for states along the mainstem and others in the watershed to reach lower loads ofexcess nutrient (Mississippi River/Gulf of Mexico Hypoxia Task Force (https://www.epa.gov/ms-htf).
Click here to read the REPORT FROM 2020 SHELF-WIDE HYPOXIA CRUISE.