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Widespread and increasing near-bottom hypoxia in the coastal ocean off the United States Pacific Northwest.

John A BarthStephen D PierceBrendan R CarterFrancis ChanAnatoli Y ErofeevJennifer L FisherRichard A FeelyKym C JacobsonAimee A KellerCheryl A MorganJohn E PohlLeif K RasmusonVictor Simon
Published in: Scientific reports (2024)
The 2021 summer upwelling season off the United States Pacific Northwest coast was unusually strong leading to widespread near-bottom, low-oxygen waters. During summer 2021, an unprecedented number of ship- and underwater glider-based measurements of dissolved oxygen were made in this region. Near-bottom hypoxia, that is dissolved oxygen less than 61 µmol kg -1 and harmful to marine animals, was observed over nearly half of the continental shelf inshore of the 200-m isobath, covering 15,500 square kilometers. A mid-shelf ribbon with near-bottom, dissolved oxygen less than 50 µmol kg -1 extended for 450 km off north-central Oregon and Washington. Spatial patterns in near-bottom oxygen are related to the continental shelf width and other features of the region. Maps of near-bottom oxygen since 1950 show a consistent trend toward lower oxygen levels over time. The fraction of near-bottom water inshore of the 200-m isobath that is hypoxic on average during the summer upwelling season increases over time from nearly absent (2%) in 1950-1980, to 24% in 2009-2018, compared with 56% during the anomalously strong upwelling conditions in 2021. Widespread and increasing near-bottom hypoxia is consistent with increased upwelling-favorable wind forcing under climate change.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • organic matter
  • heat stress
  • human health
  • tertiary care