Description
Gulf of Mexico
This is Passport to Texas
Every year the Gulf of Mexico endures Dead Zones. Areas of low-oxygenated water where animals suffocate and die.
The condition is called hypoxia, and scientists estimate this year’s dead zone could be one of the largest ever, already at nearly 8,000 square miles just off the coast of Louisiana and Texas.
An abnormal number of spring rains and floods saturated the Midwest, leaving farmland unsuitable for planting. The nitrogen and phosphorus-rich fertilizer with which farmers had prepped the land washed directly into the Mississippi river.
This bumper amount of fertilizer along with urban runoff created an explosion of phytoplankton growth at the coast.
And while Phytoplankton are the foundation of the aquatic food chain, too much phytoplankton decomposing at once can completely devoid the water of oxygen.
The impact is deadly on any aquatic life that cannot easily swim away such as shrimp, crabs, clams and oysters. Those that do survive can be toxic table fare for humans.
Task forces at the state and federal level are continually working to monitor and reduce the number of nutrients entering the Gulf. Scientists are hopeful on-going research will help shape environmental policy, that in turn can reduce the size of dead zones.
For Texas Parks and Wildlife…I’m Cecilia Nasti.
2019 First Day Hike at Davis Mountains State Park
This is Passport to Texas
If one of your resolutions is to sit less and move more in the New Year, may I suggest a First Day Hike to start things right.
First Day Hikes is a nationwide initiative that Texas State Parks has been participating in...
Published 12/31/19
Javelina Happy Hour
This is Passport to Texas
Javelina, also called Collared Peccary, is a Texas native and lives in scrubby and arid regions of the state. Similar to hogs in appearance, they are not related. But mistaken identity doesn’t change their value in the ecosystem.
Javelina play a...
Published 12/26/19