GLOUCESTER POINT, Va. — The Chesapeake Bay’s annual summer dead zone is forecast to be one of the smallest in nearly four decades, driven by unusually low river flows and reduced nitrogen pollution entering the estuary this spring, scientists said.
The 2026 Chesapeake Bay Hypoxia Forecast projects dead zone severity will rank in the lowest 10% of years since monitoring began in 1985 and fall about 31% below the long-term average.
From January through April, river inflows were 32% below average and nitrogen loads were 39% lower than typical, totaling roughly 59 million pounds — figures that scientists say point to better oxygen conditions for blue crabs, fish, oysters and other marine life this summer.
“Lower nitrogen loads entering the bay this spring are expected to translate into better oxygen conditions for fish, crabs, oysters and other bay life this summer,” said Aaron Bever, senior environmental scientist with FlowWest.
Dead zones form when excess nutrients — primarily nitrogen from agricultural runoff, wastewater treatment plants and urban landscapes — fuel algal blooms. As the algae die and decompose, they strip oxygen from the water, creating hypoxic conditions that can suffocate marine life.
Scientists cautioned that summer weather, including heat waves, heavy rainfall or prolonged calm periods, could still affect the dead zone’s size and duration in ways that are difficult to predict months in advance.
Researchers at the Batten School of Coastal & Marine Sciences at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science and FlowWest produced the forecast using a model originally developed by the University of Michigan. The forecast resumes an annual spring prediction series that began in 2007.
Scientists noted that long-term pollution reduction efforts have strengthened the bay’s resilience, though warming temperatures and shifting precipitation patterns pose ongoing challenges.
“Annual forecasts, daily environmental predictions and fall assessments each provide a different but complementary view of Chesapeake Bay conditions,” said Marjy Friedrichs, a research professor at the Batten School. “Together, they help us understand how the bay is responding to nutrient reductions, climate variability and year-to-year weather.”
Current bay conditions can be tracked throughout the summer via the Chesapeake Bay Environmental Forecasting System dashboard.

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