(Press-News.org) Rivers, streams, lakes, and reservoirs aren’t just scenic parts of our landscape—they’re also vital engines for life on Earth. These inland waters ‘breathe’ oxygen, just like we do. But a new study led by Utrecht University researchers shows that we’ve been suffocating them during the last century, an era also known as the Anthropocene. The research, published today in Science Advances, reveals that the way oxygen is produced and used in inland waters has dramatically changed since 1900. The culprit? Human activities.
Oxygen, the most critical resource for life on Earth, plays an important role in other nutrient cycles such as carbon and nitrogen. Oxygen depletion in water, called hypoxia, is causing problems. They are piling up in various coastal and freshwater systems. The result? Dying fish, disrupted food webs, poor water quality and more which is already affecting freshwater ecosystems across the globe. This study shows it’s not just a local problem—it’s a planetary one.
Behind oxygen depletion: accelerated oxygen cycle
A group of researchers, led by Utrecht Earth scientists Junjie Wang and Jack Middelburg, have developed for the first time a global model that describes the entire oxygen cycle of inland waters around the world. ‘With this model, we offer the most complete possible understanding of this cycle on a large scale, so that one can see oxygen related problems coming, get to know the causes, and hopefully intervene in time,’ Jack Middelburg explains.
Inland waters have become much busier places when it comes to oxygen. The team found that the global "oxygen turnover"—that is how much oxygen is produced and consumed—has increased. But here’s the twist: these waters are consuming more oxygen than they produce, making them a growing sink of atmospheric oxygen.
Cause
‘More farming, more wastewater, more dams, and a warmer climate—they all change how our freshwater ecosystems function,’ says Junjie Wang. With more nutrients flowing into rivers, lakes and reservoirs, algae grow faster, but when they die and decompose, they use up huge amounts of oxygen. ‘We found that the main causes lay in these direct human activities. First, it turns out that nutrient input through, for example, over-fertilization, is a major driver of this acceleration. Secondly, the longer travel time of freshwater to the sea through the construction of dams and reservoirs has proven to be just as important’, says Jack Middelburg.
At the same time, indirect human impacts like rising temperatures make oxygen less soluble in water, transport slower vertically across the water column, and speed up processes that burn through it even faster. 'Until now, the consensus in the scientific literature has always been that the rise in temperature is primarily causing this acceleration. But our model shows that warming only contributes about 10-20% to this phenomenon,' Junjie Wang says.
The Anthropocene fingerprint
This study showed that the modern oxygen cycle in inland waters looks nothing as it did in the early 1900s. ‘Even though these waters cover just a tiny fraction of Earth’s surface, they now remove nearly 1 billion tonnes of oxygen from the atmosphere each year—overall half of what the entire ocean emits back,’ says Middelburg. ‘We can’t ignore inland waters in global climate and oxygen budgets anymore,’ Junjie Wang adds. ‘They’re changing faster than we thought, and they’re crucial pieces of the Earth system puzzle.’
END
Oxygen is running low in inland waters—and humans are to blame
New Utrecht-led study reveals major shifts in the global freshwater oxygen cycle
2025-04-04
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
ACP’s Best Practice Advice addresses use of cannabis, cannabinoids for chronic noncancer pain
2025-04-04
NEW ORLEANS April 4, 2025 – The American College of Physicians (ACP) has issued Best Practice Advice for clinicians whose patients are considering or using cannabis or cannabinoids for management of chronic, noncancer pain. Cannabis or Cannabinoids for the Management of Chronic Noncancer Pain: Best Practice Advice From the American College of Physicians, was published today in Annals of Internal Medicine.
ACP’s Best Practice Advice paper is intended to inform clinicians about the evidence regarding the benefits and harms of cannabis or cannabinoids in the management of chronic noncancer pain and to provide advice for clinicians counseling patients seeking ...
Beyond photorespiration: A systematic approach to unlocking enhanced plant productivity
2025-04-04
A groundbreaking study published in Science Advances has revealed promising strategies to significantly improve crop yields by addressing photorespiration, a metabolic process that can reduce productivity by up to 36% in some crops. Researchers from the University of Groningen and Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, working as part of the GAIN4CROPS project (gain4crops.eu), have evaluated several alternative pathways that could help overcome this major agricultural bottleneck.
Photorespiration occurs when the enzyme RuBisCO, essential for photosynthesis, reacts with oxygen instead of carbon dioxide, resulting ...
How a small number of mutations can fuel outbreaks of western equine encephalitis virus
2025-04-04
New research shows how small shifts in the molecular makeup of a virus can profoundly alter its fate. These shifts could turn a deadly pathogen into a harmless bug or supercharge a relatively benign virus, influencing its ability to infect humans and cause dangerous outbreaks.
This is the latest finding in a series of studies led by Jonathan Abraham, associate professor of microbiology in the Blavatnik Institute at Harvard Medical School, and his team that aim to understand the risk of western equine encephalitis virus and related viruses. The work, which was supported ...
Exposure to wildfire smoke linked with worsening mental health conditions
2025-04-04
Key points:
Short-term exposure to fine particulate air pollution (PM2.5) from a wildfire may increase the risk of emergency department visits for mental health conditions, especially for women, youth, racial minorities, and Medicaid enrollees.
The study is among the first to examine the relationship between wildfire-specific PM2.5 and mental health.
According to the researchers, the findings highlight the need for targeted interventions to prevent and address increased mental health distress during wildfire seasons, especially ...
Research uncovers hidden spread of one of the most common hospital-associated infections
2025-04-04
Key Points:
C. difficile is one of the most common and contagious hospital-acquired infections.
Research has found that C. diff spreads more than three times more than previously thought.
C. diff can spread covertly from surface to surface and remain undetected for weeks until it infects a patient.
IMPACT: The results could spur more rigorous preventive measures that stop hidden spread of the disease.
One of the most common health care-associated infections spreads within intensive care units ...
Many older adults send their doctors portal messages, but who pays?
2025-04-04
When today’s older adults were growing up, the only way to get information to your doctor or their clinic was a phone call. And getting more than a simple answer probably meant going in for an appointment.
But a new study suggests that people in their 50s and older have embraced the ability to send and receive secure medical messages with their doctors and other providers, through the digital patient portals that most health systems and medical offices now offer.
The study also suggests that some older adults – including those with very low incomes – find themselves getting billed for ...
Fine particulate matter from 2020 California wildfires and mental health–related emergency department visits
2025-04-04
About The Study: Wildfire smoke exposure was associated with significantly increased odds of subsequent emergency department visits for mental health conditions in this cross-sectional study, with varying lag times for different subconditions and demographic groups. Health care professionals and systems should prepare for a possible increase in demand for mental health–related emergency services during wildfire events.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Kari C. Nadeau, MD, PhD, email knadeau@hsph.harvard.edu.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.3326)
Editor’s ...
Gender inequity in institutional leadership roles in US academic medical centers
2025-04-04
About The Study: This systematic scoping review suggests that even though emphasis has been placed on addressing gender inequities in academic medicine, considerable disparities remain at the leadership level. While certain positions and specialties have been observed to have more female leaders, niches of academic medicine almost or completely exclude women from their leadership ranks. Importantly, even female-dominated specialties, such as obstetrics and gynecology, have substantial inequity in leadership roles. It is past time for organizational and systems-level changes to ensure equitable ...
Pancreatic cells ‘remember’ epigenetic precancerous marks without genetic sequence mutations
2025-04-04
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Johns Hopkins Medicine scientists say they have found a pattern of so-called epigenetic “marks” in a transition state between normal and pancreatic cancer cells in mice, and that the normal cells may keep at least a temporary “memory” of those cancer-linked marks.
Epigenetic marks are chemical modifications that help regulate genetic expression without directly altering DNA sequence in the makeup of genes. While the genetic code is like a computer’s hardware, epigenetics involves chemical marks on top of the genetic code that act as software programing in a computer.
The ...
Rare combination of ovarian tumors found in one patient
2025-04-04
“This case underscores the rare coexistence of serous cystadenofibroma in one ovary and collision features involving serous and mucinous cysts in the contralateral ovary, a combination scarcely reported in the literature.”
BUFFALO, NY — April 4, 2025— A new case report was published in Oncoscience’s Volume 12 on March 31, 2025, titled “Cystadenofibroma and contralateral collision lesions: A unique ovarian case report.”
Authored by Dr. Naina Kumar and colleagues from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, the report presents a highly unusual case involving two different types of benign ovarian tumors in ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
The heritability of human lifespan is roughly 50%, once external mortality is addressed
Tracking Finland’s ice fishers reveals how social information guides foraging decisions
DNA-protein crosslinks promote inflammation-linked premature aging and embryonic lethality in mice
Accounting for fossil energy’s “minimum viable scale” is central to decarbonization
Immunotherapy reduces plaque in arteries of mice
Using AI to retrace the evolution of genetic control elements in the brain
New 3D printing method makes affordable, realistic replicas as structurally complex as a human hand
Direct imaging captures the crystalline vibrations of a supersolid made of atoms and light
What ice-fishing competitions reveal about human decision-making
Scientists solve the mystery of why termite kings and queens are monogamous
New poll: most Americans would consider a plant-based alternative to chicken wings during Super Bowl
Concordia study finds snow droughts in western and southern Canada could affect nearly all Canadians
Artificial lung system keeps patient alive without lungs until transplant
A framework for understanding (and researching) what causes human cancers
Ecology: Svalbard polar bears insulated against sea ice loss
Breakthrough study reveals early neural circuit that determines food reward
High-deductible health plans and mortality among cancer survivors
Cancer incidence and mortality with aspirin in older adults
How the brain's 'memory replay' goes wrong in Alzheimer's disease
New guide aims to tame the chaos of UTI care
The Frontiers of Knowledge Award goes to Joan Daemen and Vincent Rijmen for designing the cryptographic system that protects the security of electronic devices and digital connections worldwide
AI swarms could hijack democracy—without anyone noticing
Sex determines the connection between diseases, according to a BSC study that exposes historical biases in public health
Family care expectations clash with shrinking availability, dementia needs
New device switches terahertz pulses between electric and magnetic skyrmions
Vaping zebrafish suggest E-cigarette exposure disrupts gut microbial networks and neurobehavior
UMass Amherst researchers help uncover hidden genetic drivers of diabetes
Can justice happen on a laptop? Study says yes
Landmark FAU/CSU study: More paid time off keeps US workers from quitting
Traditional and novel virologic markers for functional cure and HBeAg loss with pegylated interferon in chronic hepatitis B
[Press-News.org] Oxygen is running low in inland waters—and humans are to blameNew Utrecht-led study reveals major shifts in the global freshwater oxygen cycle


