A seasonally occurring summer hypoxic (low oxygen) zone in the northern Gulf of Mexico is the second largest in the world. Reductions in nutrients from agricultural cropland in its watershed are needed to reduce the hypoxic zone size to the national policy goal of 5,000 km(2) (as a 5-y running average) set by the national Gulf of Mexico Task Force\u27s Action Plan. We develop an integrated assessment model linking the water quality effects of cropland conservation investment decisions on the more than 550 agricultural subwatersheds that deliver nutrients into the Gulf with a hypoxic zone model. We use this integrated assessment model to identify the most cost-effective subwatersheds to target for cropland conservation investments. We consid...
Each year, a large area of the Gulf of Mexico is seasonally depleted of life-giving oxygen. Called h...
Hypoxia is a critical issue in the Gulf of Mexico that has challenged management efforts in recent y...
Anthropogenic eutrophication events are increasing in occurrence world-wide (Rabalais et al. 2002). ...
In 2008, the hypoxic zone in the Gulf of Mexico, measuring 20 720 km2, was one of the two largest re...
Every summer, a hypoxic zone forms in the Gulf of Mexico, where dissolved oxygen is too low for many...
Each spring and summer in the Gulf of Mexico, nutrient-rich ef- fl uent from the Mississippi and Atc...
The United States is home to the second largest hypoxic (or dead zone) in the world, in the Gulf of ...
Since 1985, the size of the hypoxic zone in the Gulf of Mexico has been measured every July via a cr...
The presence of a “dead zone” in the Gulf of Mexico caused by nutrients (nitrogen and phosphorus) co...
Reducing the size of the hypoxic zone (Dead Zone) in the northern Gulf of Mexico will require a sign...
A large region of low-dissolved-oxygen bottom waters (hypoxia) forms nearly every summer in the nort...
A large region of low-dissolved-oxygen bottom waters (hypoxia) forms nearly every summer in the nort...
A large region of low-dissolved-oxygen bottom waters (hypoxia) forms nearly every summer in the nort...
This article reviews and analyzes the issues related to worldwide hypoxic zones and the range of eco...
Every summer, a large area forms in the northern Gulf of Mexico where dissolved oxygen becomes too l...
Each year, a large area of the Gulf of Mexico is seasonally depleted of life-giving oxygen. Called h...
Hypoxia is a critical issue in the Gulf of Mexico that has challenged management efforts in recent y...
Anthropogenic eutrophication events are increasing in occurrence world-wide (Rabalais et al. 2002). ...
In 2008, the hypoxic zone in the Gulf of Mexico, measuring 20 720 km2, was one of the two largest re...
Every summer, a hypoxic zone forms in the Gulf of Mexico, where dissolved oxygen is too low for many...
Each spring and summer in the Gulf of Mexico, nutrient-rich ef- fl uent from the Mississippi and Atc...
The United States is home to the second largest hypoxic (or dead zone) in the world, in the Gulf of ...
Since 1985, the size of the hypoxic zone in the Gulf of Mexico has been measured every July via a cr...
The presence of a “dead zone” in the Gulf of Mexico caused by nutrients (nitrogen and phosphorus) co...
Reducing the size of the hypoxic zone (Dead Zone) in the northern Gulf of Mexico will require a sign...
A large region of low-dissolved-oxygen bottom waters (hypoxia) forms nearly every summer in the nort...
A large region of low-dissolved-oxygen bottom waters (hypoxia) forms nearly every summer in the nort...
A large region of low-dissolved-oxygen bottom waters (hypoxia) forms nearly every summer in the nort...
This article reviews and analyzes the issues related to worldwide hypoxic zones and the range of eco...
Every summer, a large area forms in the northern Gulf of Mexico where dissolved oxygen becomes too l...
Each year, a large area of the Gulf of Mexico is seasonally depleted of life-giving oxygen. Called h...
Hypoxia is a critical issue in the Gulf of Mexico that has challenged management efforts in recent y...
Anthropogenic eutrophication events are increasing in occurrence world-wide (Rabalais et al. 2002). ...