San Francisco Chronicle

Water quality:

- By Seth Borenstein Seth Borenstein is an Associated Press writer.

Projected increases in rain due to global warming could damage U.S. waterways with fertilizer runoff, causing dead zones and algae blooms.

WASHINGTON — Projected increases in rain from global warming could further choke U.S. waterways with fertilizer runoff that cause dead zones and huge algae blooms, a new study said.

If greenhouse gas emissions keep rising, more and heavier rain will increase nitrogen flowing into lakes, rivers and bays by about 19 percent by the end of the century, according to a study in Thursday’s journal Science .

While that may not sound like much, many coastal areas are already heavily loaded with nitrogen. Researcher­s calculated that an extra 860,000 tons of nitrogen yearly will wash into American waterways by century’s end.

The nutrients create low-oxygen dead zones and harmful blooms of algae in the Gulf of Mexico, Great Lakes, Pacific Northwest and Atlantic coast.

“Many of these coastal areas are already suffering year-in, year-out from these dead zones and algal blooms,” said one of the researcher­s, Anna Michalak, an ecologist at the Carnegie Institutio­n for Science at Stanford University. “And climate change will make it all worse.”

When waterways are overloaded with nutrients, algae growth can run amok, creating dead zones. Algae can also choke waterways with “green mats of goop on top of the water” that are giant floating blooms, Michalak said.

The blooms often have toxins that can pollute drinking water. In 2014, a bloom on Lake Erie fouled tap water for half a million people in Toledo, Ohio, for more than two days.

The study, which is based on computer simulation­s, found the Northeast and Midwest will be hit hardest by the increase in nitrogen runoff. Most of the excess nitrogen from fertilizer use and the burning of coal, oil and gas would flow into the Mississipp­i River system and into the Gulf of Mexico, one of the largest dead zones on Earth, researcher­s said.

“The results are incredibly interestin­g and compelling,” said Samantha Joye, a University of Georgia marine sciences professor who wasn’t part of the team.

 ?? NASA 2015 ?? Phytoplank­ton floats off the coasts of New York (top) and New Jersey (left) in 2015. Such floating green mats can create “dead zones” in U.S. waterways.
NASA 2015 Phytoplank­ton floats off the coasts of New York (top) and New Jersey (left) in 2015. Such floating green mats can create “dead zones” in U.S. waterways.

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