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Biogeosciences Discuss., 6, 9127-9160, 2009
www.biogeosciences-discuss.net/6/9127/2009/
doi:10.5194/bgd-6-9127-2009
© Author(s) 2009. This work is distributed
under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.


Evidence for greater oxygen decline rates in the coastal ocean than in the open ocean

D. Gilbert1, N. N. Rabalais2, R. J. Diaz3, and J. Zhang4
1Institut Maurice-Lamontagne, Pêches et Océans Canada, 850 Route de la mer, Mont-Joli, G5H 3Z4, Québec, Canada
2Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium, 8124 Highway 56, Chauvin, LA 70344, USA
3Virginia Institute of Marine Science, College of William and Mary, Gloucester Point, VA 23062, USA
4State Key Laboratory of Estuarine and Coastal Research, East China Normal University, 3663 Zhongshan Road North, Putuo District, Shanghai 200062, China

Abstract. In the global ocean, the number of reported hypoxic sites (oxygen <30% saturation) is on the rise both near the coast and in the open ocean. But unfortunately, most of the papers on hypoxia only present oxygen data from one or two years, so that we often lack a long-term perspective on whether oxygen levels at these locations are decreasing, steady or increasing. Consequently, we cannot rule out the possibility that many of the newly reported hypoxic areas were hypoxic in the past, and that the increasing number of hypoxic areas partly reflects increased research and monitoring efforts. Here we address this shortcoming by computing oxygen concentration trends in the global ocean from published time series and from time series that we calculated using a global oxygen database. Our results show that oxygen concentrations are generally decreasing in the ocean. They also reveal a greater percentage of negative trends for published oxygen time series than for oxygen time series computed from the global oxygen database, particularly in the open ocean. Finally, the oxygen decline rates computed from the global oxygen database are more severe in a 30 km band near the coast than in the open ocean, probably in response to human-caused eutrophication.

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Citation: Gilbert, D., Rabalais, N. N., Diaz, R. J., and Zhang, J.: Evidence for greater oxygen decline rates in the coastal ocean than in the open ocean, Biogeosciences Discuss., 6, 9127-9160, doi:10.5194/bgd-6-9127-2009, 2009.   Bibtex   EndNote   Reference Manager    XML
 

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