4.5 Article

Extent, patterns, and drivers of hypoxia in the world's streams and rivers

Journal

LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY LETTERS
Volume 8, Issue 3, Pages 453-463

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/lol2.10297

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This study reveals that hypoxia is a global issue in rivers, with a prevalence of 12.6% in sampled sites. Hypoxic events are more likely to occur at night and are influenced by river attributes rather than watershed characteristics. Warmer, smaller, and lower-gradient rivers with urban or wetland land cover show a higher likelihood of hypoxia.
Hypoxia in coastal waters and lakes is widely recognized as a detrimental environmental issue, yet we lack a comparable understanding of hypoxia in rivers. We investigated controls on hypoxia using 118 million paired observations of dissolved oxygen (DO) concentration and water temperature in over 125,000 locations in rivers from 93 countries. We found hypoxia (DO < 2 mg L-1) in 12.6% of all river sites across 53 countries, but no consistent trend in prevalence since 1950. High-frequency data reveal a 3-h median duration of hypoxic events which are most likely to initiate at night. River attributes were better predictors of riverine hypoxia occurrence than watershed land cover, topography, and climate characteristics. Hypoxia was more likely to occur in warmer, smaller, and lower-gradient rivers, particularly those draining urban or wetland land cover. Our findings suggest that riverine hypoxia and the resulting impacts on ecosystems may be more pervasive than previously assumed.

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