Coastal ‘Dead Zones’ Are Multiplying. Seaweed Farms May Be the Solution | Bloomberg

Dead zone shown in the Gulf of Mexico. Credit: NASA/GSFC/Aqua MODIS

aquaculture specialist Gretchen Grebe comments on the use of seaweed for pollution remediation. Grebe works with Associate Scientist Loretta Roberson, who is leading a large Department of Energy-funded project to cultivate seaweed in U.S. tropical waters for remediation and for biofuels production.

In May 2019, the Mississippi River dumped a daily average of more than 5,000 metric tons of nitrate and 800 metric tons of phosphorous into the Gulf of Mexico, . These excess nutrients from Midwest farm fertilizer and animal waste rob the waters off Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas of oxygen, fueling toxic algal blooms and causing what’s come to be known as a dead zone.

The size varies each year, but this particular patch’s five-year average . To date, a U.S. government task force has made little if any progress toward the goal of reducing it to 2,000 square miles. …

But there may be a solution on the horizon. A  makes the case that the Gulf of Mexico could trade in its slimy algae for silky green seaweed, which if planted in sufficient numbers could soak up much of that damaging waste. 

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