(Press-News.org) With careful planning and a little luck, researchers found a surprising upside to hurricanes after a Category 4 storm disrupted their expedition off the coast of Mexico.
The team was able to sample the ocean right after the storm passed and found that the storms churn the ocean so powerfully and deeply — up to thousands of meters — that nutrient-rich, cold water is brought to the surface.
The resulting phytoplankton blooms — visible in satellite imagery taken from space — are a feast for bacteria, zooplankton, small fish, and filter-feeding animals such as shellfish and baleen whales.
“When we got there, you could actually see and smell the difference in the ocean,” said Professor Michael Beman. “It was green from all the chlorophyll being produced. There were totally different organisms there, and they were going nuts in the wake of the storm.”
But all that mixing also stirs up low-oxygen zones deep in the water, bringing them much nearer the surface than usual, threatening organisms that need higher oxygen concentrations to survive.
Beman, a marine biologist, studies microbial ecology and biogeochemistry. One of his focuses is oceanic oxygen minimum zones (OMZs), large and globally significant areas with little to no oxygen. They are persistent layers in the water column that have low oxygen concentration due to biological, chemical and physical processes. OMZs occur naturally, in contrast to similar “dead zones” that pollution can produce.
OMZs are typically found at mid-depths and can significantly impact marine ecosystems as they are inhospitable to many organisms. Warming ocean waters are contributing to the expansion of OMZs.
In 2018, Beman and his lab went on a research expedition from Mazatlán, Mexico, to San Diego, to study OMZs with collaborators from Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, and several other institutions.
They knew turbulent weather was likely and closely watched as the second named storm of the year, Hurricane Bud, spun into their planned sampling region.
“We were very careful, and we had plans A, B, C and D in place,” he said. “The forecasting was extremely accurate, and we knew the storm rapidly intensified.”
Instead of going ashore, they traveled between research sites and behind islands while they waited for the storm to pass.
“There was some skill involved, but definitely some luck, too, and we ended up adding a sampling location right where the storm was at maximum power,” Beman said, “basically within a few kilometers of the former eye.”
Those samples are rarely, if ever, taken just after a hurricane has churned the water so powerfully. The data indicated the hurricane had dramatically changed oxygen concentrations.
“I've never seen measurements like that in those areas of the ocean, ever,” Beman said.
Since the trip, the researchers have been examining different aspects of the results, and a new paper in Science Advances, a journal published by the American Association for the Advancement of Science, details their findings.
Beman collaborated on the expedition with Scripps geosciences Professor Lihini Aluwihare and two of her students, Margot White and Irina Koester.
“Margot noticed the subsurface changes from the hurricane when she was preparing her thesis chapters, especially the fact that the oxygen minimum zone had rapidly shoaled,” he said. “Irina searched her unique organic matter data to look for changes driven by the hurricane, which turned out to be very clear and dramatic.
“We've met many, many times to analyze the data and figure out what effects the hurricane had and why.”
The samples also included DNA and RNA, so the researchers could detect the signatures of the organisms that responded to the phytoplankton bloom. Beman said they saw many turtles, which was unusual because they were so far offshore.
“We were doing this at a time of year when there’s not a lot going on biologically in these areas of the ocean,” he said, “so these hurricane-generated blooms are like oases for ocean organisms. We detected a bacteria bloom, but I wouldn’t be surprised if larger organisms made use of the hurricanes. They might sense the storms coming and then migrate to areas the storm had just passed over.”
Their samples and data are so unique that Beman plans to keep working on them and hopes to collaborate with other scientists interested in the effects of hurricanes and hurricane forecasting.
“We are just scratching the surface of what these storms do, and it was a rough few days at sea,” he said. “I hope we continue to learn as much as we can about what actually happens during and after hurricanes.”
END
Hurricanes create powerful changes deep in the ocean, study reveals
2025-06-06
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Genetic link found between iron deficiency and Crohn’s disease
2025-06-06
RIVERSIDE, Calif. -- A study led by biomedical scientists at the University of California, Riverside School of Medicine shows how a genetic mutation associated with Crohn’s disease can worsen iron deficiency and anemia — one of the most common complications experienced by patients with inflammatory bowel disease, or IBD.
While IBD — a group of chronic inflammatory disorders that includes Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis — primarily affects the intestines, it can have effects beyond the gut. Iron deficient ...
Biologists target lifecycle of deadly parasite
2025-06-06
Chagas disease is often called a silent killer because many people don’t realize they have it until complications from the infection kill them.
Researchers at the University of Cincinnati are exploring ways to interrupt the lifecycle of the parasite behind the illness, offering hope of developing a cure.
The disease is spread by parasites found in kissing bugs, which suck the blood of people when they are sleeping. The bugs typically bite victims around their faces, which gives them their ironically sweet-sounding name. The bugs transmit the internal parasites in their poop, which infects the bloodstream of human hosts through the bite wounds.
The study was published ...
nTIDE June 2025 Jobs Report: Employment of people with disabilities holds steady in the face of uncertainty
2025-06-06
East Hanover, NJ – June 6, 2025 – The latest National Trends in Disability Employment (nTIDE) report shows that people with disabilities maintain connection to the workforce as the economy slows and the supply chains brace for the potential impact of tariffs. nTIDE is issued by Kessler Foundation and the University of New Hampshire’s Institute on Disability.
Month-to-Month nTIDE Numbers (comparing April 2025 to May 2025)
Based on data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Jobs Report released today, the employment-to-population ratio for people with disabilities (ages ...
Throughput computing enables astronomers to use AI to decode iconic black holes
2025-06-06
MADISON — An international team of astronomers has trained a neural network with millions of synthetic simulations and artificial intelligence (AI) to tease out new cosmic curiosities about black holes, revealing the one at the center of our Milky Way is spinning at nearly top speed.
These large ensembles of simulations were generated by throughput computing capabilities provided by the Center for High Throughput Computing (CHTC), a joint entity of the Morgridge Institute for Research and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. The astronomers published their results and methodology today in three papers in the journal Astronomy ...
Why some kids respond better to myopia lenses? Genes might hold the answer
2025-06-06
New genetic research is shedding light on why some children benefit more than others from orthokeratology lenses—an increasingly popular method to slow the progression of myopia. In the largest genome-wide study of its kind, scientists discovered that children who responded better to treatment carried a higher number of nonsynonymous mutations in genes associated with retinal diseases. Among the key players identified were RIMS2 and LCA5, genes involved in retinal function and visual processing. These insights not only reveal a biological basis for the variability in treatment outcomes but also pave the way for using genetic screening to personalize ...
Kelp forest collapse alters food web and energy dynamics in the Gulf of Maine
2025-06-06
While kelp forests persist along northern Maine’s rocky coast, kelp abundance has declined by as much as 80% on the southern coast in recent decades. In its stead, carpet-like turf algae have moved in.
A team, led by scientists at Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, are examining the broad consequences of this shift. Their recently published research in Science Advances shows that predator-prey interactions and the flow of energy are fundamentally different on turf-dominated reefs compared to the remaining kelp forests.
Using ...
Improving T cell responses to vaccines
2025-06-06
KEY TAKEAWAYS:
Adding IL-12, a cytokine produced by various immune cells, to mRNA vaccines improves T cell responses
This could make the benefits of vaccines last longer
This is also a promising approach for reducing the risk of cancer
In the quest to design vaccines that better help the body’s immune system fight disease, scientists are always looking for more tools for their arsenal. The strong antibody responses generated by vaccines provide an important first round of defense, but “you always want to have a backup plan,” says Biomedical Graduate Studies Ph.D. student Emily A. Aunins, considering viruses mutate to evade antibody responses that ...
Nurses speak out: fixing care for disadvantaged patients
2025-06-06
PHILADELPHIA (June 6, 2025) – A new Penn Nursing Center for Health Outcomes & Policy Research (CHOPR) study sheds light on the critical factors that help or hinder hospital nurses in providing quality care to socially disadvantaged populations. The findings, published in JAMA Network Open, offer vital insights to inform hospital strategies for advancing high-quality, equitable care.
The study, which analyzed open-text responses from 1084 direct care hospital nurses across 58 New York and Illinois hospitals, identified six key themes impacting care delivery:
Profits ...
Fecal transplants: Promising treatment or potential health risk?
2025-06-06
Fecal microbiota transplants (FMT) have been touted as a potential treatment for a variety of conditions, from inflammatory bowel diseases, obesity, and type 2 diabetes to autism. New research from the University of Chicago, however, cautions against widespread use of FMT because of the potential for long-lasting, unintended health consequences for recipients.
FMT involves transferring microbes in the stool from a healthy person to a sick one, in hopes of restoring a healthy equilibrium in the gut microbiome. Since stools contain primarily anaerobic microbes from the colon (i.e. they can’t tolerate oxygen), FMT can cause mismatches in the gut ecosystem when those bacteria colonize the ...
US workers’ self-reported mental health outcomes by industry and occupation
2025-06-06
About The Study: In this cross-sectional study, poor mental health among workers varied significantly by sociodemographic categories; significant differences among industry and occupation groups remained after adjustment. More research is needed on the effects of work-related factors on mental health, which may inform tailored treatment and prevention strategies.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Aaron L. Sussell, PhD, email als7@cdc.gov.
To access the embargoed study: ...