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Thursday, June 16, 2016

Experts: Chesapeake Bay’s ‘Dead Zone’ Will Be Smaller This Year

BALTIMORE (WJZ) — The Chesapeake Bay has been showing major signs of improvement this year with clearer water, more bay grasses and an increase in the crab population.

But every summer, massive algae blooms create dead zones in the bay,WJZ’s Alex DeMetrick reports.

Dead zones are created when the algae begins to decay and chokes the oxygen out of the water, killing anything that isn’t able to relocate.

Rainfall washes nitrogen and phosphorous found in fertilizer, human and animal waste and air pollution into the bay for the algae to feed off of. But with a lack of rainfall this year, the algae blooms are expected to be smaller.

“What we’re predicting for this summer is a less than average dead zone,” says Dr. Bill Dennison of the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science. “This is good news for the bay.”

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6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Lack of Rainfall ? Seriously ?

KBinLA said...

My thoughts exactly 12:04PM
Where the hell has this clown been?
It's a classic, and I mean Classic example of why only 20% of Americans believe ANY news media today.

Anonymous said...

That was the first thing I thought! He must be calculating that it only rained once in May. It started May 1st and ended May 31st

Anonymous said...

these guys just make it up so we will continue to pour more money into their coffers

Anonymous said...

You people are dopey. A quick Google search shows MD to be down .89 of an inch for the past 12 months.

Anonymous said...

It takes some pretty bad water to suffocate a catfish.