Trends and drivers of hypoxic thickness and volume in the northern Gulf of Mexico: 1985-2018.

PLoS One

Center for Geospatial Analytics, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina, United States of America.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Hypoxia in the northern Gulf of Mexico is a key environmental issue, affecting both commercial and ecological health, and while previous studies have focused on the size of the hypoxic zone, this research examines its volume and thickness throughout the summer.
  • - The study utilizes a geospatial model and advanced statistical methods to provide a clearer understanding of the seasonal changes in hypoxia, showing a significant increase in hypoxic thickness over the past 30 years at a rate of 5.9 cm/year.
  • - Key findings reveal that spring nitrogen runoff is the primary driver of hypoxia metrics, including area, thickness, and volume, with hypoxic volume being more consistent and easier to predict than hypoxic thickness, which is also affected by

Article Abstract

Hypoxia is a major environmental issue plaguing the commercially and ecologically important coastal waters of the northern Gulf of Mexico. Several modeling studies have explored this phenomenon, but primarily focus on the areal extent of the mid-summer hypoxic zone. Research into the variability and drivers of hypoxic volume and thickness is also important in evaluating the seasonal progression of hypoxia and its impact on coastal resources. In this study, we compile data from multiple monitoring programs and develop a geospatial model capable of estimating hypoxic thickness and volume across the summer season. We adopt a space-time geostatistical framework and introduce a rank-based inverse normal transformation to simulate more realistic distributions of hypoxic layer thickness. Our findings indicate that, on average, there is a seasonal lag in peak hypoxic volume and thickness compared to hypoxic area. We assess long-term trends in different hypoxia metrics (area, thickness, and volume), and while most metrics did not exhibit significant trends, mid-summer hypoxic thickness is found to have increased at a rate of 5.9 cm/year (p<0.05) over the past three decades. In addition, spring nitrogen load is found to be the major driver of all hypoxia metrics, when considered along with other riverine inputs and meteorological factors in multiple regression models. Hypoxic volume, which was also often influenced by east-west wind velocities, was found to be more predictable than hypoxic thickness.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11620451PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0302759PLOS

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