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Giant Dome For Gulf Oil Leak Is Best Short-Term Solution

CAIN BURDEAU and HARRY R. WEBER   05/ 5/10 09:43 PM ET   AP

Dome Oil Leak

NEW ORLEANS — The oil you can't see could be as bad as the oil you can.

While people anxiously wait for the slick in the Gulf of Mexico to wash up along the coast, globules of oil are already falling to the bottom of the sea, where they threaten virtually every link in the ocean food chain, from plankton to fish that are on dinner tables everywhere.

"The threat to the deep-sea habitat is already a done deal – it is happening now," said Paul Montagna, a marine scientist at the Harte Research Institute for Gulf of Mexico Studies at Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi.

Hail-size gobs of oil the consistency of tar or asphalt will roll around the bottom, while other bits will get trapped hundreds of feet below the surface and move with the current, said Robert S. Carney, a Louisiana State University oceanographer.

Oil has been gushing into the Gulf of Mexico at a rate of at least 200,000 gallons a day since an offshore drilling rig exploded last month and killed 11 people. On Wednesday, workers loaded a 100-ton, concrete-and-steel box the size of a four-story building onto a boat and hope to lower it to the bottom of the sea by week's end to capture some of the oil. Crews also set fires at the worst spots on the surface Wednesday to burn off oil.

Scientists say bacteria, plankton and other tiny, bottom-feeding creatures will consume oil, and will then be eaten by small fish, crabs and shrimp. They, in turn, will be eaten by bigger fish, such as red snapper, and marine mammals like dolphins.

The petroleum substances that concentrate in the sea creatures could kill them or render them unsafe for eating, scientists say.

"If the oil settles on the bottom, it will kill the smaller organisms like the copepods and small worms," Montagna said. "When we lose the forage, then you have an impact on the larger fish."

Making matters worse for the deep sea is the leaking well's location: It is near the continental shelf of the Gulf where a string of coral reefs flourishes. Coral is a living creature that excretes a hard calcium carbonate exoskeleton, and oil globs can kill it.

The reefs are colorful underwater metropolises of biodiversity, attracting sea sponges, crabs, fish, algae and octopus.

"In my mind, they are at least as sensitive to contamination to oil as coastal habitat," said James Cowan, an oceanographer at Louisiana State University. "They are in deeper water, so they are kind of out of sight, out of mind."

There are other important habitats in shallower waters, such as an ancient oyster shell reef off the Mississippi and Alabama coasts. It is a vital nursery ground for red snapper and habitat for sponges, soft corals and starfish.

Scientists are watching carefully to see whether the slick will hitch a ride to the East Coast by way of a powerful eddy known as the "loop current," which could send the spill around Florida and into the Atlantic Ocean. If that happens, the oil could foul beaches and kill marine life on the East Coast.

"Once it's in the loop current, that's the worst case," said Steve DiMarco, an oceanographer with Texas A&M University-College Station. "Then that oil could wind up along the Keys and transported out to the Atlantic."

Engineers are racing to stem the flow of oil before the disaster escalates, mainly by getting ready to place a giant structure on top of the spill to funnel the crude into a tanker. The boat carrying the contraption set sail late Wednesday.

"We're a little anxious," boat captain Demi Shaffer told The Associated Press aboard the vessel just after it set off. "They're gonna try everything they can. If it don't work, they'll try something else." The Associated Press is the only news organization with access to the containment effort in the Gulf.

BP is also exploring a technique in which crews would reconfigure the well that would allow them to plug the leak, but that effort is a couple weeks off.

The cause of the rig explosion is still not known, but investigators from multiple federal agencies are looking into the matter. The rig owner, Transocean, said in a filing with regulators Wednesday that it has received a request from the Justice Department to preserve information about the blast.

The Gulf ecosystem is already stressed by fertilizer and other farm runoff from the Mississippi River and the loss of wetlands to erosion and development. About 2,100 square miles of wetlands have disappeared since the 1930s in the southern Louisiana.

Every summer, algae caused by fertilizer runoff sucks up the oxygen in a large patch of the Gulf, creating a "dead zone" from which all sorts of sea creatures must escape. This year, they will be swimming into waters fouled by the oil spill.

"We're always wondering when we may reach the point where straw breaks the camel's back," Montagna said. "At some point you have to wonder if we will see catastrophic losses."

___

Associated Press Writer Ray Henry contributed to this report from Robert, La. Weber contributed from Port Fourchon, La.

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dynamohum
12:10 PM on 05/06/2010
What is sadder yet, is that there are so few comments on this thread.
01:17 PM on 05/06/2010
I will help you get more people here. I have contacted several environment organizations to start a national march for alt energy. It is time we all stand up and DEMAND atl engery. Enough is enough. I have been begging people to get off the politcial blogs and start going to the "green" section of Huff Post for months. It took this disaster to get people here. :( thanks for caring....you are fanned. xo
02:37 PM on 05/06/2010
Every person with an IQ over 73 is stunned, depressed, and speechless right now.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ascoli
11:33 AM on 05/06/2010
What a sad sad state of affaires.
10:38 AM on 05/06/2010
There are good and sound, if really selfish, reasons that the east and west coasts refused to build refineries and drill off shore wells.
The cities along those coasts saw what kinds of polution and destruction refineries and oil spills could casue and were happy to let others suffer for their oil.

They have just been reminded.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MyOwnPerson172
Progressive because I have a brain and a heart.
10:23 AM on 05/06/2010
I've been reading comments and indeed have found and posted a link to some numbers that suggest there is a lot of "natural seepage" of oil. I don't know where they get their numbers but they seem to be a lot like the Global Warming deniers. I'd call them the Jed Clampett drill baby drillers. You know, the earth's already poisoning us so why shouldn't we do it too.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dynamohum
12:10 PM on 05/06/2010
It is an incredible level of denial is it not? last sane person is a prime example.
02:43 PM on 05/06/2010
Creeps love seeps.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
HLL
My little dog — a heartbeat at my feet ^..^
09:15 AM on 05/06/2010
If you would like to help the animals in the Gulf, below are some suggestions:

DONATE:
International Bird Rescue Research Center [has a team is Louisiana]:
http://intbirdrescue.blogspot.com/2010/04/team-activated-to-help-in-massive-gulf.html

Tri-State Bird Rescue & Research [has a team is Louisiana]:
http://www.tristatebird.org/

National Audubon Society: http://www.audubon.org/

HSUS Wildlife Care Center in Florida for BP oil spill response:
http://www.humanesociety.org/news/news/2010/05/wildlife_affected_by_oil.html
http://www.humanesociety.org/animal_community/shelters/wildlife_care_center.html

Pascagoula River Audubon Center:
http://pascagoulariver.audubon.org/issues-action/oil-spill-efforts

The Institute for Marine Mammal Studies:
http://www.imms.org/index.php

Gulf Coast Wildlife Rescue - http://gcwr.org/how_can_i_help.html

ACTION:
SIGN Sierra Club Petition to President Obama: "Just Say NO to more dirty, dangerous offshore drilling" http://action.sierraclub.org/site/PageNavigator/adv_oilspill
09:01 AM on 05/06/2010
It is no secret that BP essentially "owns" the scandal-ridden, coke-sniffing MMS division of the Dept of the Interior. This is the kind of oversight that our tax dollars have bought us...

From the Seattle Times:

BP's trail of accidents, scandals:

"BP, the most important oil company in Alaska and the corporation at the heart of the Gulf of Mexico oil-drilling disaster, has struggled with perhaps the oil industry's worst environmental and safety record of the last decade.

...its accidents and scandals ranged from a refinery explosion that killed 15 people in Texas City in 2005 to a 212,000-gallon oil spill in Alaska from a corroded pipeline that had not been thoroughly inspected in years. Both came in a five-year period during which BP earned $70 billion in profit."

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2011791796_bpalaska06m.html

It's an election year-start writing to your Congressmen, Senators, & the White House & get those bought & paid for MMS employees of BP OFF the federal payroll.
12:50 PM on 05/06/2010
and who was lobbying the obama admin. for BP to get the safey inspection waver? none other than uber insider and obam pal Tony Podesta.
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Totto
"Not 'Noise' One Round: *Music*
02:02 PM on 05/06/2010
Had Hillary been elected, you could've been a contender! Only in your little mind.
08:52 AM on 05/06/2010
This is the Headline

Marine Scientists Fear "Catastrophic Losses"

This is what the scientist actually said

Montagna said. "At some point you have to wonder if we will see catastrophic losses.

Gotta love sensationalism
11:52 AM on 05/06/2010
And then there's this tidbit from the top of the article: "The threat to the deep-sea habitat is already a done deal – it is happening now," said Paul Montagna, a marine scientist at the Harte Research Institute for Gulf of Mexico Studies at Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi.
06:24 PM on 05/06/2010
You might want to ask the scientist for the data that supports his SPECULATION. You know, an ocean bottom panorama with the thanatcenose visible.
Details of the ship track might assist credibility.
02:38 PM on 05/06/2010
Your screen name contains the terms "sane" and "American".

Gotta love irony.
fredjernig
Good night, and good luck!
08:40 AM on 05/06/2010
This just highlights the unsustainability of our lifestyle.
And to think that GROWTH of the economy, of the population, is still widely regarded as a good thing.
We need to focus on decreasing our production and consumption of things. We need another way of taking care of the poor and unemployed, rather than promising the "growth" will come back and solve everything.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rougebaisers
08:33 AM on 05/06/2010
Humans do not deserve this jewel of a planet, and when it sends us packing for good, down that slippery path to extinction, just look back and say 'we deserve it'..................
08:59 AM on 05/06/2010
You know you are right.

Dear Mother Nature has snuffed out thousands upon thousands of species on this planet (Sagan copyrighted that bigger B------ number) in the last 600 million years [5,256,000,000,000 hours for those of you that like to magnify]

And be assured she can. She does not need help from us.
02:40 PM on 05/06/2010
And yet, you seem to be pretty enthusiastic about this chance to "help". Feel pretty inadequate most of the time? I'm sorry, but don't take it out on the rest of the world.
12:15 PM on 05/17/2010
I give it a few more years! We are going at light speed! Go leaders of today! Or are they just sales people with great health insurance and pretty dresses.
08:19 AM on 05/06/2010
Well, we were already headed for the day when all fish would be raised in farms and fed corn. Now we're there early. Good day for corn!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rougebaisers
08:33 AM on 05/06/2010
If you eat a fish out of our oceans you are going to get much sicker than you already are.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dynamohum
07:56 AM on 05/06/2010
Oh, wonderful, AP is the only sanctioned news organization with access to the containment effort in the Gulf! Did everyone read that "little" gem? AP I am sure is being paid and told exactly what to say and what to report. Obviously there aren't any pictures allowed. This is a complete sham and frankly I am tired of the explanations given for the various strategies that they have employed and have yet to employ.

I, for one, will not eat anything from the Gulf ever again. I also am devistated at the amount of undersea creatures that are going to be destroyed and proabably extincted. The coral reefs go and quite franklty the WHOLE system collapses with just this one event. The food chain cannot be broken without grave consequences for the entire United States.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dynamohum
08:00 AM on 05/06/2010
should be "probably" not proabably.......
12:31 PM on 05/06/2010
Should be "devastated".
09:08 AM on 05/06/2010
Did you know those reefs to which you refer grow preferentially in areas of known seeps?

And did you know that they cover a very few square miles of the Gulf? Ecologically interesting but not ecologically significant? The Louisiana marshland is - many tens of thousand of square miles.

And did you know that there are many rich benthic biota communities that exist solely in areas of natural seeps?

But I know you do not wish to be confused by fact. Sorry
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dynamohum
12:07 PM on 05/06/2010
If you would like to discuss the ramifications of this ecologically, fine, let's discuss, but do not attack me because I have an opinion that differs from yours. Furthermore, you are correct that marshland (correct term - wetlands) is very important and critical for the health of the area, but the reefs are EQUALLY as important. So your snark is just that. Facts interest me greatly, but snark does not. Have a great day!
02:27 PM on 05/06/2010
And, it's only water..... right?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LeaderofMen
Bilingual former US Marine.
07:39 AM on 05/06/2010
Oil gushers are just part of the natural cycle of the earth, much like climate change. (sarcasm off)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sis3563
08:35 AM on 05/06/2010
(sarcasm on:) Everything happens for a reason. Amen.
12:17 PM on 05/17/2010
yah, greed.
07:16 AM on 05/06/2010
There is a fundamental flaw in some comments, but by no means in all of them. Environmental damage cannot be paid for. Period. Money may give you some relief for some time but will not give your children a pristine world.
09:11 AM on 05/06/2010
You know, I do not think you would have liked the pristine world, 4.6 billion years ago.

You would have had trouble breathing for starters. Pristine is a little older than when you were born, friend.
11:57 AM on 05/06/2010
You have a strange and peculiar--and fortunately singular--sense of "sanity".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ravencalling
My macro-bio is full
07:09 AM on 05/06/2010
Justice would involve everyone who took a payoff to let BP bypass regulations, everyone who spouted Drill Baby Drill for their own political gain, everyone who within BP worked to bypass safety measures and environmental disaster recovery plans, should be working to clean up the spill, and clean the animals. They would be re-located to live there, so they could see the ocean they helped to ruin every single day. Of course I also have thoughts of dropping them in shark infested waters so that the ocean could have it's own revenge.
08:14 AM on 05/06/2010
And their nutrition should come exclusively from Gulf seafood.
12:55 PM on 05/06/2010
Ok..lets start with the first pro driing dem president...

---

U.S. exempted BP’s Gulf of Mexico drilling from environmental impact study

By Juliet Eilperin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, May 5, 2010

The Interior Department exempted BP’s calamitous Gulf of Mexico drilling operation from a detailed environmental impact analysis last year, according to government documents, after three reviews of the area concluded that a massive oil spill was unlikely.

The decision by the department’s Minerals Management Service (MMS) to give BP’s lease at Deepwater Horizon a “categorical exclusion” from the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) on April 6, 2009 — and BP’s lobbying efforts just 11 days before the explosion to expand those exemptions

....and who was lobbying the obama admin. for BP to get the safey inspection waver? none other than uber insider and obam pal Tony Podesta.
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Totto
"Not 'Noise' One Round: *Music*
02:00 PM on 05/06/2010
Your anti-Obama campaign would be more effective if you knew how to spell or typed more slowly. Still lonely on that stinky old tub, little Mr. "Boat-Bike-Bus"?
07:04 AM on 05/06/2010
Maybe we could shut down use and production of fertilizer so as not to create the runoff. But without a law to prevent this, followed by the promise of compensation, it will be business as usual.