NOAA and partners announce below-average ‘dead zone’ measured in Gulf of Mexico

Tyler Wittkofsky | NOAA 2 August 2023 Today, NOAA-supported scientists announced that this year’s Gulf of Mexico “dead zone”— an area of low to no oxygen that can kill fish and marine life — is approximately 3,058 square miles. That’s almost two million acres of habitat potentially unavailable to fish and bottom species — [...]

2024-01-10T01:33:40+00:00August 2nd, 2023|News|Comments Off on NOAA and partners announce below-average ‘dead zone’ measured in Gulf of Mexico

NOAA forecasts below-average summer ‘dead zone’ in Gulf of Mexico

Tyler Wittkofsky | NOAA 5 June 2023 NOAA is forecasting a summer “dead zone” in the Gulf of Mexico that will cover approximately 4,155 square miles, making it below the 5,364 square mile average over the 36-year history of dead zone measurements in the region. The dead zone, or hypoxic area, is an area of [...]

2023-08-02T21:31:25+00:00June 5th, 2023|News|Comments Off on NOAA forecasts below-average summer ‘dead zone’ in Gulf of Mexico

Study finds climate change is bringing more intense rains to U.S.

Atmospheric scientists noted the trend was prevalent in nearly every region of the country. Matthew Cappucci | The Washington Post 11 October 2022 When it rains, it pours. A paper published Tuesday in the journal Geophysical Research Letters finds that it’s raining harder in most of the United States. The study, written by researchers at [...]

2023-05-22T21:09:11+00:00May 10th, 2023|News|Comments Off on Study finds climate change is bringing more intense rains to U.S.

Giant seaweed blob twice the width of the US takes aim at Florida

Rachel Tucker | The Washington Post 13 March 2023 TAMPA, Fla. (WFLA) — Marine scientists are tracking a 5,000-mile-wide seaweed bloom that is so large, it can be seen from space. These sargassum blooms are nothing new, but scientists say this one could be the largest in history. At last check, it was heading [...]

2023-05-22T22:56:37+00:00March 12th, 2023|News|Comments Off on Giant seaweed blob twice the width of the US takes aim at Florida

Cassandra Glaspie

Assistant Professor, Department of Oceanography & Coastal Sciences Office Address: 3195 Energy, Coast and Environment Building, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, 70803 Phone: 225-578-0379 cglaspie1@lsu.edu Education B.S., 2008, Zoology Michigan State University Ph.D., 2010, Marine Science Virginia Institute of Marine Science, College of William & Mary Recent Publications Erisman, B. E., Bolser, D. G., [...]

2022-12-30T02:24:34+00:00December 15th, 2022|Research Team|Comments Off on Cassandra Glaspie

Jill Tupitza

PhD Candidate Education B.S., 2016, Major in Environmental Science, Minor in Chemistry University of Virginia Ph.D., in progress Louisiana State University

2022-12-30T02:38:04+00:00December 15th, 2022|Research Team|Comments Off on Jill Tupitza

‘Dead zone’ smaller than expected, but bigger than desired

Joshua Rosenberg | The Lens 3 AUGUST 2022 The so-called dead zone where the Mississippi River dumps into the Gulf of Mexico, an area of low oxygen that cannot sustain life, clocked in at 3,275 square miles this year. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) announced the size Wednesday, noting that it is below [...]

2023-05-22T23:06:51+00:00August 3rd, 2022|News|Comments Off on ‘Dead zone’ smaller than expected, but bigger than desired

Gulf dead zone smaller this year, but still five times size of Lake Pontchartrain

Mark Schleifstein | NOLA.com 3 August 2022 Scientists measuring the low-oxygen dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico this summer found a mix of good and bad news: It covered only 3,275 square miles of bottom waters, less than half the size of last year. But that was still larger than the combined areas [...]

2023-05-22T22:36:33+00:00August 3rd, 2022|News|Comments Off on Gulf dead zone smaller this year, but still five times size of Lake Pontchartrain

To reduce harmful algal blooms and dead zones, the US needs a national strategy for regulating farm pollution

Donald Boesch & Donald Scavia | The Conversation 18 July 2022 Midsummer is the time for forecasts of the size of this year’s “dead zones” and algal blooms in major lakes and bays. Will the Gulf of Mexico dead zone be the size of New Jersey, or only as big as Connecticut? Will Lake Erie’s [...]

2023-05-22T21:47:03+00:00July 18th, 2022|News|Comments Off on To reduce harmful algal blooms and dead zones, the US needs a national strategy for regulating farm pollution

Record heat in Gulf of Mexico, local lakes poses hurricane, health and fisheries threats

Mark Schleifstein | NOLA.com 25 June 2022 The record June heat wave in southern Louisiana, with water temperatures edging into the mid-90s on Friday in Lake Pontchartrain and along the Gulf Coast, is serving up a triple whammy of water-related dangers: an elevated risk of intense hurricanes, an increased number of dangerous Vibrio bacteria infections, and [...]

2023-05-22T21:02:11+00:00June 25th, 2022|News|Comments Off on Record heat in Gulf of Mexico, local lakes poses hurricane, health and fisheries threats
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