from NY Times..
The Gulf of Mexico's "dead zone" this year is among the largest on record, scientists tracking the oxygen-depleted area said yesterday. The sprawling area with levels of dissolved oxygen low enough to smother marine life is 7,722 square miles, the researchers said, slightly smaller than New Jersey.
The dead zone overlaps some waters exposed to crude from the damaged BP PLC oil well, but researchers said it is not clear if there is a connection between the spill and the size of the low-oxygen area. "It would be difficult to link conditions seen this summer with oil from the BP spill, in either a positive or a negative way," said Nancy Rabalais, executive director of the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium and the leader of the annual dead-zone survey, which is now in its 25th year.
The dead zone does threaten Gulf fisheries that have already been squeezed by oil-spill closures.
Excessive nutrients washing into the Gulf overfertilize the water and cause massive algae blooms. As the plants die and sink, they decompose and deplete dissolved oxygen. Bottom dwellers and other creatures that cannot flee are suffocated by falling oxygen levels.
Rabalais and her team started mapping the dead zone on July 24. They found the northwestern Gulf has a dead zone that sprawls over 7,722 square miles, which is just shy of the record 8,000 or so square miles measured in 2001. Rabalais said it is
the largest hypoxic area she's seen between Galveston, Texas, and the Mississippi River's "bird foot" delta.more:
http://www.nytimes.com/gwire/2010/08/03/03greenwire-this-years-gulf-dead-zone-among-largest-ever-24761.htmlI suspect this is not related to BP spill. Galveston is quite a long distance from the well and there have been no reports of the oil moving in that direction.