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Oil Spill Florida Keys: Scientists Think Oil Has Entered Loop Current And Poses Grave Threat To Reefs

Oil Spill Florida Keys

JASON DEAREN and MATT SEDENSKY   05/17/10 01:31 PM ET   AP

NEW ORLEANS — Delicate coral reefs already have been tainted by plumes of crude oil spewing into the Gulf of Mexico, including a sensitive area that federal officials had tried to protect from drilling and other dangers.

And marine scientists are worried even more of the deep-sea reefs could be damaged as the thick goo creeps into two powerful Gulf currents. The oil has seeped into areas that are essential to underwater life, and the reefs tend to be an indicator for sea health: when creatures in the reefs thrive, so do other marine life.

The loop current could carry oil from the spill east and spread it about 450 miles to the Florida Keys, while the Louisiana coastal current could move the oil as far west as central Texas.

The depth of the gushing leaks and the use of more than 580,000 gallons of chemicals to disperse the oil, including unprecedented injections deep in the sea, have helped keep the crude beneath the sea surface. Officials report that more than 390,000 gallons of chemicals are stockpiled. Marine scientists say diffusing and sinking the oil helps protect the surface species and the Gulf Coast shoreline but increases the chance of harming deep-sea reefs.

"At first we had a lot of concern about surface animals like turtles, whales and dolphins," said Paul Montagna, a marine biologist at Texas A&M University Corpus Christi who studies Gulf reefs. "Now we're concerned about everything."

On Sunday, researchers said computer models show oil has already entered the loop current that could carry the toxic goo toward the Keys, the third-longest barrier reef in the world.

The oil is now over the western edge of a roughly 61-mile expanse of 300-to-500-foot-deep reef south of Louisiana known as the Pinnacles, about 25 miles north of where the Deepwater Horizon exploded April 20, killing 11 people and starting the spill that grows by the hour.

The Pinnacles is one of nine coral banks and hard-bottom areas stretching from Texas to Florida that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration tried in 2008 to get designated a marine sanctuary called Islands in the Stream.

This sanctuary would have restricted fishing and oil drilling around the identified reef "islands." But the plan was put on hold after vehement objections from Republican lawmakers, fishermen and the oil industry.

Scientists have found undersea plumes of oil at the spill as much as 10 miles long, which are an unprecedented danger to the deep sea environment, said Samantha Joye, a professor of marine sciences at the University of Georgia.

These plumes are being eaten by microbes thousands of feet deep, which removes oxygen from the water.

"Deepwater coral are abundant on the sea floor in this part of the Gulf, and they need oxygen," said Joye, who was involved in the plume discovery. "Without it, they can't survive."

Experts say the well's depth and Friday's decision by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to allow BP to shoot massive amounts of dispersing chemicals deep underwater may help protect vital marshes and wetlands on the Gulf Coast. But the tradeoff may result in significant effects on more sea life.

Oil mixed with the chemical agent can disperse into the water more easily, rather than it staying on the surface, where it could bypass deeper banks like Pinnacles, said Edward Van Vleet, a chemical oceanography professor at the University of South Florida.

The downside is that it causes oil to sink, coating corals and other reef organisms and smothering them, he said.

When the dispersed oil is broken into smaller globules, he said they are more easily eaten by smaller reef organisms and can kill them or cause tumors or something else harmful.

Federal officials who oversee marine sanctuaries and fisheries say it's too early to tell how reefs and other important habitats may be damaged, said Dr. Jane Lubchenco, NOAA's undersecretary of commerce for oceans.

NOAA, which manages marine sanctuaries, is also responsible for estimating financial costs of the spill on the sea environment and fisheries. The Pinnacles is a significant habitat for sea life vital to commercial fisheries such as red snapper, crab and shrimp.

The creation of a sanctuary across hundreds of miles of the Gulf would not have blocked oil and gas exploration where the Deepwater Horizon exploded, said Montagna. However, he said it could have resulted in stricter environmental regulation for reefs closest to the spill site, and likely less drilling.

"So you can imagine these animals that make a living on rocks, filtering food out of the water, and the dispersants come along and sink the oil; it's a big concern," Montagna said.

The area also is breeding ground for sperm whales and bluefin tuna, species not doing well, he said.

Studies published in a 2005 National Academy of Sciences report show that oil mixed with dispersants damaged certain corals' reproduction and deformed their larvae. The study concluded the federal government needed to study more before using massive amounts of dispersants.

Reefs are made up of living creatures that excrete a hard calcium carbonate exoskeleton.

Depending on the oil exposure, they can be smothered by the pollutants or become more susceptible to bleaching, which hinders reproduction and growth. While the warm temperatures of Florida could speed the recovery of damaged reefs there, some problems could be seen for a decade or more. In the deeper reefs in colder water closer to the spill, the damage could last even longer.

As the spill increases, the oil oozes toward other reefs that stretch from the blowout site eastward to the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary.

The Keys exist in relatively shallow water, so the potential exposure to the oil is higher than for deeper reefs, though BP PLC officials say the oil would be more diffused after having broken down during its travel over hundreds of miles.

This week, researchers from USF and the Florida Department of Environmental Protection are heading to the loop current to get a "chemical fingerprint" of any oil they find to confirm it is from the leaking well.

"We don't expect the loop current to carry oil onto beaches," William Hogarth, dean of the University of South Florida's College of Marine Science, said. "But we do have a great concern for the Keys."

If oil reaches the Keys, it could threaten one of the country's greatest underwater natural resources as well as its tourism industry.

Locals throughout the ribbon of islands not only relish their ties to the water but rely on it to help bring in 2 million visitors each year.

"They're not going to come if our beaches are tarred and our mangroves have died and it's a polluted dump," said Millard McCleary, program director of the Key West-based Reef Relief. "They'll go to the Bahamas or the Caymans or they'll go to Mexico."

___

Sedensky reported from Key West, Fla. Associated Press writer Janet McConnaughey in New Orleans contributed to this report.

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NEW ORLEANS — Delicate coral reefs already have been tainted by plumes of crude oil spewing into the Gulf of Mexico, including a sensitive area that federal officials had tried to protect from d...
NEW ORLEANS — Delicate coral reefs already have been tainted by plumes of crude oil spewing into the Gulf of Mexico, including a sensitive area that federal officials had tried to protect from d...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hollybork
09:56 PM on 06/01/2010
John Hofmeister, a former CEO of a big oil company, was interviewed over on Squawk Box this morning and on CNN on Sunday. He proposed a solution he has been trying to convince the authorities and BP to use which will get the oil out of the Gulf before it can foul the wetlands, fisheries and beaches. He says they aren't doing it because it is a new solution.

The proposal comes from a system now used for water spills around the Arabian Penninsula.
They lease supertankers in a flotilla and send to the site of the leak. The tankers suck up all the spilled oil with their powerful pumps and long hoses, filling their tanks. When asked why it wasn't being done now, he said it was technology used for spills around the Arabia Peninsula (apparently invented there) and it works.

Hofmeister is an oil company insider and knows what he is talking about. He will be on CNN at 6:30 tomorrow morning. Here is a link to his promo on his book:

http://www.whywehatetheoilcompanies.com/

The spill is size of 4 super tankers. They take the oil from the ocean and take it to refinery where its off loaded into a centrifuge system that separates the oil from the seawater. Water by product is returned to ocean. Oil can be refined and used. Not only does it get the oil of of the gulf, it actually saves the oil for use.
10:31 PM on 05/20/2010
Well at least we now know the oil spill is many times worse than BP said. It must be one of the top 10 spills by now.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CrescentCityRay
01:29 AM on 05/19/2010
Why does New Orleans have to endure two engineering disasters of biblical proportions within five years? talk about brand damage
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CrescentCityRay
01:24 AM on 05/19/2010
I wish BP would try to make the oil go to the surface and remove as much as possible from the water. Their current solution to their pollution is dilution - suspend it in the water column with dispersant keeping most of it out of sight and of course the currents will take this pollution and in the process of traveling in these currents will thin and spread further and further until eventually it all seems to be gone. But, we cannot defend our marshes against subsurface tar balls.
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CrescentCityRay
01:23 AM on 05/19/2010
Should south Louisiana be sacrificed?

60% of the United State's wetlands are NOT in Louisiana and most of that will probably stay safe, but it is not too late to try to defend the other 40% of the United State's wetlands in Louisiana where the threat is more imminent than anywhere else.

We cannot get nearly enough containment booms in south Louisiana to come close to defending our thousands of miles of coastline, which is mostly marsh, and booms only work for floating oil in calm and very light seas.

There is a plan to start 10 dredges pumping offshore sand to reconnect what is left of our barrier islands to try to keep oil out of our marshlands and estuaries - the ones that make up 40% of America's wetlands. So far, we’ve only sacrificed our beaches and coastal marshes on the fringes. We cannot let that oil advance into our estuaries or there will be an unimaginable loss of life.

Our local leaders are trying to get emergency approval from the US Army Corps of Engineers to let us do this and a request for BP to commit to paying for dredging now because the dredges can be here in a matter of days. Sooner we start, the more will be saved. So far, BP won't comment on the request.

You can clean oil from a beach or maybe even coral, but not marsh.
11:42 AM on 05/18/2010
testing
11:35 AM on 05/18/2010
Why anyone expects the Oil to suddenly appear everywhere and damage everything IMMEDIATELY is beyond me. This takes time and the full effects will not be felt for some time
10:47 AM on 05/18/2010
BP "doesn't see the point" of measuring outflow and consistently blocks scientists' attempts to accurately measure the amount of oil gushing from the hole. why? because BP's numbers are deliberate, outright lies.

if, as some scientists have estimated, the flow is 5x (or more) greater than BP admits, impact to ocean, land, sealife and landlife will be exponentially greater than the already dreadful impacts we are beginning to see, and will call for a very different response. WE NEED TO KNOW THE TRUTH.

in the future, this event will likely not be called the BP Oil Spill, but will be referred to only as The Disaster, as it affects lives, livelihoods and species far removed from the epicenter of the spill.

or, possibly, the "beginning of the end of life as we know it"? that's a pretty dramatic statement. unfortunately, given the magnitude of the problem, BP's eff-you attitude and actions, and our government's non-response, it's not unthinkable.

what could the government be doing, right now? forcing BP to cooperate with scientists and providing oversight for such things as BP's unrestricted dumping of millions of gallons of dispersal chemicals.

as long as BP remains in charge of the disaster site we are in trouble, as they are clearly more concerned with managing their reputation than undoing the harm they've caused.

reputation? BP? forget about it. why not at least TRY to do the right thing as your corporation dies?
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Hoodoo X
tanstaafl
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11:16 PM on 05/17/2010
I don't understand the picture.
Who's the pale white ugly chick lying on the beach???
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cutandrun
Inventing it every day
11:39 PM on 05/17/2010
um.....they get that way when they are dead..........
12:38 AM on 05/18/2010
Came in with the tide?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
landofopportunity
10:17 PM on 05/17/2010
this is so stupid!
BP should have had shut off switches on each side of the pipe and redundant pipelines as well. therefore, in case of a leak like this one you simply shut off the flow of oil in both directions and divert it to the redundant pipes. there should have been a set of 5 such redundant pipes for each primary pipeline. this way it will never happen again.
however, in our country it will just keep happening until and unless we elect a brand new legislature. all politicians are on BP's payroll and they all look the other way when it comes to enforcing the rules.
welcome to the usa.
the land of the corrupt and the connected.
09:14 AM on 05/18/2010
Do you understand how drilling rigs work? There are three connections from the drilling rig to the well: the drill pipe, the riser and the choke line. In order to do any work in the well, including drilling and cementing, you need to be able to circulate drilling fluid and/or cement down the drillpipe and back up the riser because it is a closed loop. If you "shut off flow" you would never be able to access the well, even to cement it. They had already cemented the well and were in the process of testing the cement job and the seal of the packoff assembly that holds the casing in the wellhead when the blowout occurred. If the blowout preventers had already been closed, they would not have been able to perform the tests, which are designed to make sure that the well is secure before the drilling fluid is swapped out for seawater and the riser is laid down. Here endeth the lesson.
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ryker88
Only the pure in heart can make a good soup.
10:12 PM on 05/17/2010
My heart is broken. I grew up on the west coast of Florida many, many decades ago. We weren't rich enough to live on the water but I spent so many, so many summers walking to the beach and swimming in the Gulf of Mexico. I swam, I did silly flips, I dove under water, I played and played there-- the Gulf is where I learned to swim and learned so much more about the creatures who shared the Gulf with me. I was so lucky. And now I an devastated it may be destroyed by greed and arrogance and future generations won't experience what I had.
12:40 AM on 05/18/2010
I agree, ryker88. This is truly heartbreaking is no many ways. I can barely stand hearing or reading about this travesty.
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10:10 PM on 05/17/2010
BP oil flows to the Florida Keys and then up the Atlantic coast. It will happen.

Maybe Mexico will reap the benefit of a revitalized tourism trade for a while.
Perhaps undocumented Mexicans in the USA will find better jobs back home in the hotels and restaurants. Good luck to them and their families. Perhaps USA will repeal NAFTA. Good luck on that.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cutandrun
Inventing it every day
11:42 PM on 05/17/2010
Dude, who do you think is going to do the cleanup? Lazy white guys with soft hands wont get hired......
12:41 AM on 05/18/2010
The fishermen who are now out of work are clamoring to do this work. Saw one interviewed who said they were being turned away after trying to jump through the insane hoops required for being hired by BP.
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scarletxoxoxo
I was born in a ditch and I eat babies.
10:06 PM on 05/17/2010
I want that ladies number!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GBO
09:24 PM on 05/17/2010
BP is in soup
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booki
10:08 PM on 05/17/2010
and we are in BP'S SOUP.....
dead animals, fish.......take a swim anyone?