Entries in Ocean / Water (12)

Monday
Dec232013

Is the Deepwater Horizon oil spill of 2010 killing Gulf of Mexico dolphins?

Deepwater Horizon April 21, 2010. Image: United States Coast Guard

When the Deepwater Horizon exploded and collapsed in April 2010, it released of “an estimated 4.9 million barrels of oil into the northern Gulf of Mexico.” Fatal to 11 oil workers, injurious to others, and disruptive of the environment and fishing industry along the Louisiana and Mississippi coasts, the “largest accidental marine oil spill in the history of the petroleum industry” has for many of us, receded into the past. Its aftereffects, however, continue to reverberate and now pose a serious threat to dolphins in areas "that received heavy and prolonged oiling."  

According to a recent multicenter study published in Environmental Science & Technology, a “guarded” or “grave” prognosis has been given to 65% of the bottlenose dolphins studied in Barataria Bay, Lousiana. 

“The oil spill resulting from the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform initiated immediate concern for marine wildlife, including common bottlenose dolphins in sensitive coastal habitats. To evaluate potential sublethal effects on dolphins, health assessments were conducted in Barataria Bay, Louisiana, an area that received heavy and prolonged oiling, and in a reference site, Sarasota Bay, Florida, where oil was not observed.” (emphasis added)

“Barataria Bay dolphins were 5 times more likely to have moderate–severe lung disease, generally characterized by significant alveolar interstitial syndrome, lung masses, and pulmonary consolidation. Of 29 dolphins evaluated from Barataria Bay, 48% were given a guarded or worse prognosis, and 17% were considered poor or grave, indicating that they were not expected to survive. Disease conditions in Barataria Bay dolphins were significantly greater in prevalence and severity than those in Sarasota Bay dolphins, as well as those previously reported in other wild dolphin populations. Many disease conditions observed in Barataria Bay dolphins are uncommon but consistent with petroleum hydrocarbon exposure and toxicity.” (emphasis added)

Source: Health of Common Bottlenose Dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) in Barataria Bay, Louisiana, Following the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill

Related Article: Focus on Ocean’s Health as Dolphin Deaths Soar

Sunday
Dec012013

Will the world's oceans turn to slime?

Image: MiketsukunibitoIt’s encouraging to see alarm for the world’s oceans within the diplomatic literature. In an essay in the November/December 2013 issue of Foreign Affairs, Alan B. Sielen, Senior Fellow at the Scripts Institute of Oceanography, challenge readers “to summon the will and moral courage to restore the seas to health before it is too late.”

Paralleling the view of PaleoTerran, Sielen writes: “Of all the threats looming to the planet today, one of the most alarming is the seeming inexorable descent of the world’s oceans into ecological perdition."

Just a century ago, ocean life seemed unalterable,

“Yet that sea life is now in peril. Over the last 50 years – a mere blink in geological time – humanity has come perilously close to reversing the almost miraculous biological abundance of the deep. Pollution, overfishing, the destruction of habitats, and climate change are emptying the oceans and enabling the lowest forms of life to regain their dominance. The oceanographer Jeremy Jackson calls it “the rise of slime”: the transformation of once complex oceanic ecosystems featuring intricate food webs with large animals into simplistic systems dominated by microbes, jellyfish, and disease. In effect, humans are eliminating the lions and tigers of the seas to make room for the cockroaches and rats.”

Source 
Alan B. Sielen. The Devolution of the Seas: The Consequences of Oceanic Destruction

Related Posts

Monday
Oct072013

Adults Only: Ocean Health

"We know the oceans are warming. We know they are acidifying. And now, to cap it all, it turns out they are suffocating, too."

This reality is hard to share with children. On the other hand, since adults have been ineffective in stemming ocean warming and acidification - and are just now learning about ocean suffocation - maybe it's the children who will rise up and change the oceans destinies. 

Learn more
New Scientist: The oceans are heating, acidifying and choking

Related Posts

Wednesday
Oct022013

Seismic Airguns: "100,000 times more intense than a jet engine"

Image: Woods Hole Science Center

The price we pay for using seismic airguns to search for oil and gas under the ocean floor is the stunning, or death, of ocean life. When do we finally say no? As Oceana reports:

"Seismic airguns are towed behind ships and shoot loud blasts of compressed air through the water and miles into the seabed, which reflect back information about buried oil and gas deposits. These blasts harm marine mammals, sea turtles, fish and other wildlife.

Impacts include temporary and permanent hearing loss, abandonment of habitat, disruption of mating and feeding, and even beach strandings and death. For whales and dolphins, which rely on their hearing to find food, communicate, and reproduce, being able to hear is a life or death matter."

Monday
Sep092013

Oceana: Save The Oceans

“Oceana, the only international organization dedicated solely to ocean conservation, is campaigning to save the planet's remaining stocks of wild seafood.”

The Perfect Protein

Tuesday
Jun052012

The Colbert Report: Outlawing sea level rise in North Carolina

Saturday
May262012

Mater's or Doctoral degree in freshwater sciences

Looking for a new science career? Maybe you have a budding scientist in the family, or a friend interested in sustainability? Consider these unique degree programs at School of Freshwater Sciences at University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee:

The UWM School of Freshwater Sciences (SFS) is the only graduate school in the nation dedicated solely to the study of freshwater. SFS is committed to equipping future scientists and professionals with the interdisciplinary skills and expertise necessary to address the complex, multifaceted issues facing the world's freshwater resources. SFS offers doctoral and master's graduate degrees and undergraduate research and learning opportunities.

Wednesday
May232012

Water on Earth

Credit: Howard Perlman, USGS; globe illustration by Jack Cook, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (©); Adam Nieman

This drawing shows various blue spheres representing relative amounts of Earth's water in comparison to the size of the Earth. Are you surprised that these water spheres look so small? They are only small in relation to the size of the Earth.

The smaller sphere over Kentucky represents Earth's liquid fresh water in groundwater, swamp water, rivers, and lakes.

Do you notice that "tiny" bubble over Atlanta, Georgia? That one represents fresh water in all the lakes and rivers on the planet, and most of the water people and life of earth need every day comes from these surface-water sources. 

U.S. Geological Survey

Monday
Oct172011

Numbers: Spot check on average water use

26,518
Gallons used by average Maine resident 

53,689
Gallons used by average U.S. resident

66,607
Gallons used by average Oklahoman

68,059
Gallons used by average Texan

102,381
Gallons used by average Nevada resident

Source: The Daily

Monday
Jul182011

Quote: "Ocean bulldozers" - enormous nets weighed down with rollers - scrape the ocean floor

I mentioned earlier that those rollers have the power to push aside twenty-five-ton boulders. They pulverize everything in their path, crushing deep coral, grinding boulders to rubble, wiping out populations of old fish and other creatures, which will take generations to recover, and leave behind a flat, lifeless moonscape of gravel and sand.

Ted Danson with Michael D'Orso
Oceana 

Sunday
Apr172011

Ocean Acidification by the Numbers

500
Billions of tons of CO2 emitted through fossil fuels (coal, oil, natural gas) and deforestation since the beginning of the industrial revolution.

30
Billions of tons of CO2 currently emitted each year.

800,000
Years since atmospheric CO2 has been as high as today.

30
Percent of CO2 produced by humans over the past two centuries that has been absorbed by the oceans.

1,000,000
Tons of CO2 absorbed by the oceans every hour.

25
Percent of ocean species that spend at least part of their life in coral reefs. 

80
Percent of loss of coral reefs in the Caribbean from 1977-2001.

2050
Year the oceans coral reefs predicted to loose "ecological functionality." 

 

Source: The Acid Sea, National Geopgraphic

Wednesday
Feb022011

Numbers: Water and blue jeans

3,500
The number of liters of water a pair of jeans uses over its lifetime

180
The number of office coolers it takes to hold 3,500 liters of water

42
The number of liters of water an average pair of jeans uses for finishing

Source: Your pants are an eco-abomination—here’s how to lessen their impact
Related Entry: Jeans made with less water