Abstract
Hypoxia is one of the common effects of eutrophication in coastal marine ecosystems and is becoming an increasingly prevalent problem worldwide. The causes of hypoxia are associated with excess nutrient inputs from both point and non-point sources, although the response of coastal marine ecosystems is strongly modulated by physical processes such as stratification and mixing. Changes in climate, particularly temperature, may also affect the susceptibility of coastal marine ecosystems to hypoxia. Hypoxia is a particularly severe disturbance because it causes death of biota and catastrophic changes in the ecosystem. Bottom water oxygen deficiency not only influences the habitat of living resources but also the biogeochemical processes that control nutrient concentrations in the water column. Increased phosphorus fluxes from sediments into overlying waters occur with hypoxia. In addition, reductions in the ability of ecosystems to remove nitrogen through denitrification and anaerobic ammonium oxidation may be related to hypoxia and could lead to acceleration in the rate of eutrophication. Three large coastal marine ecosystems (Chesapeake Bay, Northern Gulf of Mexico, and Danish Straits) all demonstrate thresholds whereby repeated hypoxic events have led to an increase in susceptibility of further hypoxia and accelerated eutrophication. Once hypoxia occurs, reoccurrence is likely and may be difficult to reverse. Therefore, elucidating ecosystem thresholds of hypoxia and linking them to nutrient inputs are necessary for the management of coastal marine ecosystems. Finally, projected increases in warming show an increase in the susceptibility of coastal marine ecosystems to hypoxia such that hypoxia will expand.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Alexander, R. B., R. A. Smith, G. E. Schwarz, E. W. Boyer, J. W. Nolan & J. W. Brakebill, 2008. Differences in phosphorus and nitrogen delivery to the Gulf of Mexico from the Mississippi River basin. Environmental Science & Technology 42: 822–830.
Carstensen, J., D. J. Conley, J. H. Andersen & G. Ærtebjerg, 2006. Coastal eutrophication and trend reversal: a Danish case study. Limnology & Oceanography 51: 398–408.
Christensen, J. H., B. Hewitson, A. Busuioc, A. Chen, X. Gao, I. Held, R. Jones, R. K. Kolli, W. T. Kwon, R. Laprise, V. Magaña Rueda, L. Mearns, C. G. Menéndez, J. Räisänen, A. Rinke, A. Sarr & P. Whetton, 2007. Regional climate projections. In Solomon, S., D. Qin, M. Manning, Z. Chen, M. Marquis, K. B. Averyt, M. Tignor & H. L. Miller (eds), Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis. Contribution of Working Group I to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge: 847–940.
Collie, J. S., K. Richardson & J. H. Steele, 2004. Regime shifts: can ecological theory illuminate the mechanisms?. Progress in Oceanography 60: 281–302.
Conley, D. J., 1999. Biogeochemical nutrient cycles and nutrient management strategies. Hydrobiologia 410: 87–96.
Conley, D. J., C. Humborg, L. Rahm, O. P. Savchuk & F. Wulff, 2002. Hypoxia in the Baltic Sea and basin-scale changes in phosphorus biogeochemistry. Environmental Science & Technology 36: 5315–5320.
Conley, D. J., J. Carstensen, G. Ærtebjerg, P. B. Christensen, T. Dalsgaard, J. L. S. Hansen & A. B. Josefson, 2007. Long-term changes and impacts of hypoxia in Danish coastal waters. Ecological Applications 17: S165–S184.
Dalsgaard, T., D. E. Canfield, J. Petersen, B. Thamdrup & J. Acuha-Gonzalez, 2003. N2 production by the anammox reaction in the anoxic water column of Golfo Dulce, Costa Rica. Nature 422: 606–608.
Deutsch, C., J. L. Sarmiento, D. M. Sigman, N. Gruber & J. P. Dunne, 2007. Spatial coupling of nitrogen inputs and losses in the ocean. Nature 445: 163–167.
Díaz, R. J., 2001. Overview of hypoxia around the world. Journal of Environmental Quality 30: 275–281.
Díaz, R. J. & R. Rosenberg, 1995. Marine benthic hypoxia: a review of its ecological effects and the behavioural responses of benthic macrofauna. Oceanography and Marine Biology: Annual Review 33: 245–303.
Díaz, R. J. & R. Rosenberg, 2008. Spreading dead zone and consequences for marine ecosystems. Science 321: 926–929.
Duarte, C. M., D. J. Conley, J. Carstensen &, M. Sánchez-Camacho, 2009. Return to Neverland: shifting baselines affect ecosystem restoration targets. Estuaries & Coasts 32: 29–36.
Eyre, B. D. &, A. J. P. Ferguson, 2009. Denitrification efficiency for defining critical loads of carbon in shallow coastal ecosystems. Hydrobiologia (this issue). doi:10.1007/s10750-009-9765-1.
Gombay, E. & L. Horvath, 1996. On the rate of approximations for maximum likelihood tests in change-point models. Journal of Multivariate Analysis 56: 120–152.
Gray, J. S., R. S.-s Wu & Y. Y. Or, 2002. Effects of hypoxia and organic enrichment on the coastal marine environment. Marine Ecology Progress Series 238: 249–279.
Groffman, P., M. A. Altabet, J. K. Böhlke, K. Butterbach-Bahl, M. B. David, M. K. Firestone, A. E. Giblin, T. M. Kana, L. P. Nielsen & M. A. Voytek, 2006. Methods for measuring denitrification: diverse approaches to a difficult problem. Ecological Applications 9: 1–13.
Hagy, J. D., W. R. Boynton, C. W. Keefe & K. V. Wood, 2004. Hypoxia in Chesapeake Bay, 1950–2001: long-term change in relation to nutrient loading and river flow. Estuaries 27: 634–658.
Hannig, M., G. Lavik, M. M. M. Kuypers, D. Woebken, W. Martens-Habbena & K. Jürgens, 2007. Shift from denitrification to anammox after inflow events in the central Baltic Sea. Limnology & Oceanography 52: 1336–1345.
Hansen, J. L. S. &, J. Bendtsen (2006). Climatic induced effects on marine ecosystems. National Environmental Research Institute, Roskilde, Denmark. Technical Report No. 598 (in Danish). http://technical-reports.dmu.dk.
Harris, L. A., C. M. Duarte & S. Nixon, 2006. Allometric laws and prediction in coastal and estuarine ecology. Estuaries 29: 343–347.
HELCOM, 2003. The 2002 oxygen depletion event in the Kattegat, Belt Sea and Western Baltic. Baltic Sea Environment Proceedings No. 90. Helsinki Commission for Protection of the Baltic Sea.
Holmer, M., C. M. Duarte & N. Marbá, 2003. Sulfur cycling and seagrass (Posidonia oceanica) status in carbonate sediments. Biogeochemistry 66: 223–239.
Jensen, H. S., P. B. Mortensen, F. Ø Andersen, E. Rasmussen & A. Jensen, 1995. Phosphorus cycling in a coastal marine sediment, Aarhus Bay, Denmark. Limnology & Oceanography 40: 908–917.
Karlson, K., R. Rosenberg & E. Bonsdorff, 2002. Temporal and spatial large-scale effects of eutrophication and oxygen deficiency on benthic fauna in Scandinavian and Baltic waters—A review. Oceanography and Marine Biology Annual Review 40: 427–489.
Kemp, W. M., P. Sampou, J. Caffrey & M. Mayer, 1990. Ammonium recycling versus denitrification in Chesapeake Bay sediments. Limnology & Oceanography 35: 1545–1563.
Kemp, W. M., W. R. Boynton, J. E. Adolf, D. F. Boesch, W. C. Boicourt, G. Brush, J. C. Cornwell, T. R. Fisher, P. M. Glibert, J. D. Hagy, L. W. Harding, E. D. Houde, D. G. Kimmel, W. D. Miller, R. I. E. Newell, M. R. Roman, E. M. Smith & J. C. Stevenson, 2005. Eutrophication of Chesapeake Bay: historical trends and ecological interactions. Marine Ecology Progress Series 303: 1–29.
Mee, L., 2006. Reviving Dead Zones. Scientific American. pp. 79–86.
Mortimer, C. H., 1941. The exchange of dissolved substances between mud and water. Journal of Ecology 29: 280–329.
Muradian, R., 2001. Ecological thresholds: a survey. Ecological Economics 38: 7–24.
Nixon, S. W., J. R. Kelly, B. N. Furnas, C. A. Oviatt & S. S. Hale, 1980. Phosphorus regeneration and the metabolism of coastal marine bottom communities. In K. R. Tenore & B. C. Coull (eds), Marine Benthic Dynamics. University of South Carolina Press, USA: 219–242.
Oguz, T. & D. Gilbert, 2007. Abrupt transitions of the top-down controlled Black Sea pelagic ecosystem during 1960–2000: evidence for regime-shifts under strong fishery exploitation and nutrient enrichment modulated by climate-induced variations. Deep Sea Research Part I 54: 220–242.
Österblom, H., S. Hansen, U. Larsson, O. Hjerne, F. Wulff, R. Elmgren & C. Folke, 2007. Human-induced trophic cascades and ecological regime shifts in the Baltic Sea. Ecosystems doi:10.1007/s10021-007-9069-0.
Rabalais, N. N., R. E. Turner & W. J. Wiseman Jr., 2002. Gulf of Mexico hypoxia, A.K.A. ‘The Dead Zone’. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 33: 235–263.
Rask, N., S. T. Petersen & M. H. Jensen, 1999. Responses to lowered nutrient discharges in the coastal waters around the island of Funen, Denmark. Hydrobiologia 393: 69–81.
Roeckner, E., L. Bengtsson & J. Feichter, 1999. Transient climate change simulations with a coupled atmosphere-ocean GCM including the tropospheric sulfur cycle. Journal of Climate 12: 3004–3032.
Scavia, D., N. N. Rabalais, R. E. Turner, D. Justic & W. Wiseman Jr., 2003. Predicting the response of Gulf of Mexico hypoxia to variations in Mississippi River nitrogen load. Limnology & Oceanography 48: 951–956.
Scavia, D., E. A. Kelly & J. D. Hagy III, 2006. A simple model for forecasting the effects of nitrogen loads on Chesapeake Bay hypoxia. Estuaries and Coasts 29: 674–684.
Scheffer, M., S. Carpenter, J. A. Foley, C. Folke & B. Walker, 2001. Catastrophic shifts in ecosystems. Nature 413: 591–596.
Seitzinger, S. P. & A. E. Giblin, 1996. Estimating denitrification in North Atlantic continental shelf sediments. Biogeochemistry 35: 235–260.
Sloth, N. P., H. Blackburn, L. S. Hansen, N. Risgaargd-Petersen & B. A. Lomstein, 1995. Nitrogen cycling in sediments with different organic loading. Marine Ecology Progress Series 116: 163–170.
Smith, S. V. & J. T. Hollibaugh, 1989. Carbon-controlled nitrogen cycling in a marine ‘macrocosm’: an ecosystem-scale model for managing cultural eutrophication. Marine Ecology Progress Series 52: 103–109.
Smith, D. E., M. Leffler & G. Mackiernan, 1992. Oxygen dynamics in the Chesapeake Bay. A synthesis of recent research. University of Maryland, Maryland Sea Grant.
Soetaert, K. & J. J. Middelburg, 2009. Modeling eutrophication and oligotrophication of shallow-water marine systems: the importance of sediments under stratified and well mixed conditions. Hydrobiologia (this issue). doi: 10.1007/s10750-009-9777-x.
Turner, R. E., N. N. Rabalais & D. Justic, 2008. Gulf of Mexico hypoxia: alternative states and a legacy. Environmental Science & Technology 42: 2323–2327.
Vahtera, E., D. J. Conley, B. Gustaffson, H. Kuosa, H. Pitkanen, O. Savchuk, T. Tamminen, N. Wasmund, M. Viitasalo, M. Voss & F. Wulff, 2007. Internal ecosystem feedbacks enhance nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria blooms and complicate management in the Baltic Sea. Ambio 36: 186–194.
Vaquer-Sunyer, R. & C. M. Duarte, 2008. Thresholds of hypoxia for marine biodiversity. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science 105: 15452–15457.
Webster, I. T. & G. P. Harris, 2004. Anthropogenic impacts on the ecosystems of coastal lagoons: modeling fundamental biological processes and management implications. Marine and Freshwater Research 55: 67–78.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2009 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Conley, D.J., Carstensen, J., Vaquer-Sunyer, R., Duarte, C.M. (2009). Ecosystem thresholds with hypoxia. In: Andersen, J.H., Conley, D.J. (eds) Eutrophication in Coastal Ecosystems. Developments in Hydrobiology, vol 207. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-3385-7_3
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-3385-7_3
Publisher Name: Springer, Dordrecht
Print ISBN: 978-90-481-3384-0
Online ISBN: 978-90-481-3385-7
eBook Packages: Biomedical and Life SciencesBiomedical and Life Sciences (R0)