CONSEQUENCES OF THE 1993 MISSISSIPPI RIVER FLOOD IN THE GULF-OF-MEXICO

Citation
Nn. Rabalais et al., CONSEQUENCES OF THE 1993 MISSISSIPPI RIVER FLOOD IN THE GULF-OF-MEXICO, Regulated rivers, 14(2), 1998, pp. 161-177
Citations number
37
Categorie Soggetti
Environmental Sciences","Water Resources
Journal title
ISSN journal
08869375
Volume
14
Issue
2
Year of publication
1998
Pages
161 - 177
Database
ISI
SICI code
0886-9375(1998)14:2<161:COT1MR>2.0.ZU;2-K
Abstract
Seasonally severe hypoxia (less than or equal to 2 mg O-2 1(-1)) occur s in waters below the pycnocline on the northern Gulf of Mexico inner continental shelf in May through September over extensive areas (up to 18000 km(2)). Spatial and temporal variability in the distribution of hypoxic water masses is related, in part, to the amplitude and phasin g of freshwater discharge from the Mississippi and Atchafalaya Rivers, circulation patterns, nutrient flux and a close coupling with net pro ductivity. The Mississippi River flood in 1993 and sustained freshwate r inputs to the Gulf of Mexico occurred during mid-summer through earl y autumn when long-term mean flows (1930-1995) are normally lowest. Lo ng-term studies of the Louisiana shelf hypoxic zone provided a natural experiment to examine the effects of extreme high river flow on the a djacent continental shelf. Oxygen levels in bottom waters were severel y reduced in July, August and September compared to long-term averages (1985-1992). Also, the areal extent of the bottom-water hypoxia in mi d-summer 1993 was approximately twice as large as the average area map ped in the previous 8 years during mid-summer shelfwide surveys. Contr ibuting to increased severity and areal extent of hypoxia in 1993 were reduced surface water salinities, increased strength of the pycnoclin e, five to ten times higher nutrient concentrations, greater phytoplan kton biomass, an order of magnitude greater abundance of phytoplankton , mostly small, coccoid cyanobacteria, and a shift in diatom community dynamics. An equally extensive hypoxic zone in mid-summer of 1994, wh en riverine fluxes of freshwater and nutrients were 'normal', suggests some residual effects of the 1993 summer flooding. (C) 1998 John Wile y & Sons, Ltd.