We’re hiring Facility Operations Specialists in Seldovia, AK (1), Oxford, MD (1), and Charleston, SC (3).

NCCOS PROJECT

West Florida Shelf Hypoxia and the Roles of Harmful Algal Blooms, Warming, and Extreme Events

This project began in September 2023 and is projected to be completed in August 2027.
Scientist preparing phytoplankton samples for measurements of respiration.
Scientist preparing phytoplankton samples for measurements of respiration. Credit: Patricia Glibert, UMCES.

We are seeking to understand the physical and biogeochemical mechanisms driving emerging hypoxia and to determine whether climate change is facilitating hypoxia formation on the nutrient-poor West Florida Shelf. We will also determine how multiple stressors (especially, hypoxia, harmful algal blooms, and warming) affect key fish species and their habitat and what might change the current paradigm from occasional to annual hypoxia.

Why We Care
Dissolved oxygen concentrations in both open ocean and coastal waters have been declining since at least the 1950s. This oxygen loss, or deoxygenation, is one of the most important changes occurring in the ocean, and has altered the abundances and distributions of marine species. Hypoxia (low oxygen, less than 2 mg/L) in many estuarine and coastal systems has been historically linked to coastal eutrophication, in which anthropogenic nutrient inputs stimulate primary productivity and exacerbate oxygen depletion. Over the past two decades, however, climate change has emerged as a new driver of worsening hypoxia in coastal waters.

A recent analysis of water quality data on the West Florida Shelf revealed that hypoxia was present in 5 of the 16 years examined and was likely related to large algal blooms (Karenia brevis) that were sustained throughout summer. The emergence of hypoxia on the West Florida Shelf defies the conventional understanding of coastal hypoxia and represents a newly identified mechanism for coastal hypoxia that is distinctly different. Climate change makes it easier for hypoxia to develop by increasing stratification and reducing oxygen solubility. While much is unknown about the mechanisms driving the emerging hypoxia, there is little doubt that the combination of hypoxia, toxic K. brevis blooms, and warming will multiply the stress and pressure on the marine species inhabiting the West Florida Shelf, home to one of the nation’s most diverse and productive fisheries.

What We Are Doing
Our goal is to understand the physical and biogeochemical mechanisms driving this new type of hypoxia and to determine whether climate change will facilitate hypoxia formation on nutrient-poor continental shelves. Specific objectives include measurements to determine oxygen consumption due to decaying harmful algal blooms, development of coupled hydrodynamic–biogeochemical–harmful algal bloom models for hypoxia prediction, and development of habitat models that can assess the impacts of hypoxia and other related stressors on important fish species.

We will conduct field experiments to determine the relationships between the rate of dissolved oxygen change in the water column and particulate organic matter and bacterial and phytoplankton bloom concentration. The validated model will be used to conduct hindcast simulations to understand hypoxia formation during certain years and examine its connections to harmful algal blooms, physical processes regulating stratification development, and other processes such as extreme weather events (i.e., hurricanes and tropical storms). It will also be used to conduct scenario model runs to investigate how climate change might tip the West Florida Shelf and other similar shelves from episodic hypoxia to persistent summer hypoxia. We will develop a habitat model to investigate how multi-stressors (especially, hypoxia, harmful algal blooms, and warming) affect key fish species, particularly in important fishery habitat areas and marine protected areas.

This project is part of the Coastal Hypoxia Research Program, and is led by Ming Li at the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Sciences in collaboration with Patricia Glibert and Elizabeth North, and Cynthia Heil at Mote Marine Laboratory. To ensure that our project and its outputs are useful to managers, we will work closely with federal and Florida state resource managers to translate our results.

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

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