Shrimp lovers may want to start buying and freezing Gulf shrimp now.

New estimates released by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and U.S. Geological Survey predict that the Gulf of Mexico’s “Dead Zone”—an area of low oxygen that negatively impacts its aquatic life like shrimp—will be larger than the state of New Jersey this summer. Predicted to span roughly 8,185 square miles, this will be the third largest it has been since measurements began 32 years ago.

As Chelsea Harvey at The Washington Post reports, in scientific terms the Dead Zone is known as a hypoxic zone and is located off the coasts of Texas and Louisiana. Dead zones happen naturally in coastal waters all over the world, but are worsened by human activity. In the spring and summer, agricultural runoff flows into rivers in the Mississippi River watershed, eventually making its way into the Gulf.

Those nutrients, which include tons of nitrogen and phosphorous, promote massive algae blooms in the Gulf when the water warms up. The algae eventually dies and falls to the bottom, where it decomposes. This decomposition eats up the oxygen in the water, suffocating aquatic life.