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Aquatic Dead Zones Worsen Around Globe

Chesapeake Bay
creative commons
Chesapeake Bay

BALTIMORE (AP) - An international research team including Chesapeake Bay-focused scientists says the "dead zones" that have long plagued the bay have developed and worsened across the globe.

A dead zone is an area in which the water contains little to no oxygen, sometimes leading to massive fish kills. The Baltimore Sun reports a United Nations Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission work group led by Smithsonian Environmental Research Center marine ecologist Denise Breitburg found that since 1950, the number of "suffocating" coastal ecosystems has grown tenfold, while the problem has grown four-fold in the generally more stable open ocean environments. Researchers say climate change has accelerated the growth.

University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science's Horn Point Laboratory director Michael Roman says the successful federally coordinated effort to reduce Chesapeake Bay dead zones offers lessons to the rest of the world.

Don Rush is the News Director at Delmarva Public Media. An award-winning journalist, Don reports major local issues of the day, from sea level rise, to urban development, to the changing demographics of Delmarva.