Dead zones regularly haunt coast

Dead zones regularly haunt coast By Matthew TresaugueHouston Chronicle; April 3, 2008http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/tech/news/5673526.html Low-oxygen waters known as dead zones have appeared as regularly as the tides along the Texas coast, according to a new Texas A&M University study. Although the first report of a dead zone off Texas came in 1979, researchers now believe the condition [...]

Dead zones regularly haunt coast2017-01-17T09:22:25+00:00

America’s grasslands vanishing amid agricultural boom

America's grasslands vanishing amid agricultural boom By Sue Kirchhoff and Jeff MartinUSA Today; April 4, 2008  http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/environment/2008-03-27-farming-plowing-grasslands_N.htm?loc=interstitialskip#uslPageReturn DE SMET, S.D. — To the west of this small town, which helped inspire Laura Ingalls Wilder's classic book series that included Little House on the Prairie, the view opens to a vast, unbroken landscape that seems to [...]

America’s grasslands vanishing amid agricultural boom2017-01-17T09:22:25+00:00

‘Dead zone’ off Texas coast poses threat to marine life

'Dead zone' off Texas coast poses threat to marine life By Jack Doyglas, Jr.Ft. Worth Star-Telegram; April 2, 2008http://www.star-telegram.com/804/story/560243.html A dead zone of oxygen-depleted water has lurked off the Louisiana coast for years, but a Texas A&M scientist now says the same condition exists off Texas. Although it was only publicly confirmed Tuesday, the dead [...]

‘Dead zone’ off Texas coast poses threat to marine life2017-01-17T09:22:25+00:00

Gulf Coast ‘dead zone’ growing, researchers say

Gulf Coast 'dead zone' growing, researchers say By Greg BarrHouston Business Journal, April 2, 2008http://www.bizjournals.com/houston/stories/2008/03/31/daily32.html Texas A&M University researchers have confirmed that a still-growing "dead zone" in the Gulf of Mexico extends along the entire length of the Texas Gulf Coast. A dead zone occurs when there is hypoxia, or oxygen-depleted water. Such low levels [...]

Gulf Coast ‘dead zone’ growing, researchers say2008-04-04T07:59:00+00:00

Dead zone plan adrift

Dead zone plan adrift By Erika EngelhauptEnvironmental Science & Technology Online News Feed; April 2, 2008  http://pubs.acs.org/subscribe/journals/esthag-w/2008/apr/policy/ee_deadzone.html Critics say the new action plan is not tough enough and won't succeed without federal funding. Last summer, a swath of Gulf of Mexico waters the size of New Jersey was virtually lifeless. For the past 40 years [...]

Dead zone plan adrift2017-01-17T09:22:25+00:00

Inconvenient reality

Inconvenient reality By Samantha BatesThe East Oregonian; April 1, 2008http://www.eastoregonian.info/main.asp?SectionID=13&SubSectionID=48&ArticleID=75673#articleguestbookForm#articleguestbookFormBradbury assigns task of slowing down climate changeMonday night, Oregon Secretary of State Bill Bradbury gave a talk to about 30 Eastern Oregonians and, in the end, charged them to make a difference individually when it comes to climate change.He compared the problem of climate change [...]

Inconvenient reality2017-01-17T09:22:27+00:00

Dead Zone Off Texas Coast Existed Since 1985

Dead Zone Off Texas Coast Existed Since 1985Science Daily; April 1, 2008http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/04/080401172339.htm Researchers at Texas A&M University have confirmed for the first time that a "dead zone" has existed off the Texas coast for at least the past 23 years and will likely remain there, causing potential harmful effects to marine life in the area. [...]

Dead Zone Off Texas Coast Existed Since 19852017-01-17T09:22:27+00:00

Our Views: Muddy water for marshes?

Our Views: Muddy water for marshes? By Opinion Page StaffThe Advocate, Baton Rouge, Louisiana; Mar 16, 2008http://www.2theadvocate.com/opinion/16724681.html Halfway home and getting nowhere.  That’s the story of the state and federal officials who pledged themselves in 2001 to reduce the “dead zone” in the Gulf of Mexico that causes massive kills of marine life every year. [...]

Our Views: Muddy water for marshes?2008-03-17T12:07:00+00:00

Fertilizer Runoff Overwhelms Streams and Rivers–Creating Vast “Dead Zones”

Fertilizer Runoff Overwhelms Streams and Rivers--Creating Vast "Dead Zones" By David BielloScientific American online; March 14, 2008http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=fertilizer-runoff-overwhelms-streams The nation's waterways are brimming with excess nitrogen from fertilizer--and plans to boost biofuel production threaten to aggravate an already serious situation FERTILE RUNOFF: Nitrates from fertilizer as well as animal and human waste are carried by streams [...]

Fertilizer Runoff Overwhelms Streams and Rivers–Creating Vast “Dead Zones”2008-03-17T12:04:00+00:00

Corn ethanol is worsening the Gulf dead zone

Corn ethanol is worsening the Gulf dead zonemongabay.com; March 10, 2008http://news.mongabay.com/2008/0310-ethanol.html Proposed legislation that will expand corn-ethanol production in the United States will worsen the growing "dead zone" in the Gulf of Mexico and hurt marine fisheries, report researchers writing in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). The dead zone, an expanse [...]

Corn ethanol is worsening the Gulf dead zone2008-03-14T17:14:00+00:00
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