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Volume 30, Issue 2 p. 275-281
Symposium Paper

Overview of Hypoxia around the World

Robert J. Diaz

Corresponding Author

Robert J. Diaz

School of Marine Science, Virginia Institute of Marine Science, College of William and Mary, Gloucester Pt., VA, 23062

Corresponding author ([email protected])Search for more papers by this author
First published: 01 March 2001
Citations: 942

ABSTRACT

No other environmental variable of such ecological importance to estuarine and coastal marine ecosystems around the world has changed so drastically, in such a short period of time, as dissolved oxygen. While hypoxic and anoxic environments have existed through geological time, their occurrence in shallow coastal and estuarine areas appears to be increasing, most likely accelerated by human activities. Several large systems, with historical data, that never reported hypoxia at the turn of the 19th century (e.g., Kattegat, the sea between Sweden and Denmark) now experience severe seasonal hypoxia. Synthesis of literature pertaining to benthic hypoxia and anoxia revealed that the oxygen budgets of many major coastal ecosystems have been adversely affected mainly through the process of eutrophication (the production of excess organic matter). It appears that many ecosystems that are now severely stressed by hypoxia may be near or at a threshold of change or collapse (loss of fisheries, loss of biodiversity, alteration of food webs).