4.3 Article

Evidence of persistent, recurring summertime hypoxia in Green Bay, Lake Michigan

Journal

JOURNAL OF GREAT LAKES RESEARCH
Volume 44, Issue 5, Pages 841-850

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jglr.2018.07.012

Keywords

Green Bay; Lake Michigan; Hypoxia; Dissolved oxygen; Historical records; Dead zones

Funding

  1. NEW Water Aquatic Monitoring Program
  2. NOAA CSCOR Coastal Hypoxia Research Program [NA10NOS4780139]
  3. Great Lakes Observing System [NA12OAR4320071]
  4. Michigan Water Center
  5. Erb Family Foundation [3002823792]
  6. University of Wisconsin Sea Grant Institute [NA14OAR4170070 R/HCE-12]
  7. CILER Graduate Student Fellowship [NA12OAR4320071]
  8. UWM Graduate Student Fellowships

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Six years (2009-2015) of temperature and dissolved oxygen profile data show hypoxic conditions are common in the bottom waters of southern Green Bay, Lake Michigan during the summer. Depleted oxygen concentrations (<5 mg L-1) affect nearly 70% of the 38 stations sampled representing an area of similar to 500-600 km(2). Stratification typically lasts 2+ months, from late June to early September, and some stations exhibit bottom water hypoxia (<2 mg L-1) at a frequency of nearly 25% when sampled during this period. A monitoring program initiated in 1986 by the Green Bay Metropolitan Sewerage District has provided a 23 year, recreational season record (May-September) of continuous (15 min interval) in situ bottom water oxygen and temperature measurements at the Entrance Light station of the Green Bay navigational channel. The duration of the hypoxic season ranges from 2 weeks to over 3 months at this shallow 7 m offshore site. This variability likely results from a combination of thermal stratification, oxygen consumption in deeper waters of the bay, and physical forcing mechanisms that drive cool, oxygen depleted, bottom waters on a southerly trajectory across this sensor. These data suggest the duration of hypoxic conditions may have increased during the stratified season in recent years. Hypoxia in the bay would also appear to be sensitive to relatively small changes in these forces, particularly changes in organic carbon loading and the duration of stratification. (C) 2018 International Association for Great Lakes Research. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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