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Oiled Crabs Provide Evidence Of Tainted Gulf Food Web

First Posted: 08/09/10 10:38 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 06:20 PM ET

Gulf Oil Spill

BARATARIA, La. (AP) — To assess how heavy a blow the BP oil spill has dealt the Gulf of Mexico, researchers are closely watching a staple of the seafood industry and primary indicator of the ecosystem's health: the blue crab.

Weeks ago, before engineers pumped in mud and cement to plug the gusher, scientists began finding specks of oil in crab larvae plucked from waters across the Gulf coast.

The government said last week that three-quarters of the spilled oil has been removed or naturally dissipated from the water. But the crab larvae discovery was an ominous sign that crude had already infiltrated the Gulf's vast food web – and could affect it for years to come.

"It would suggest the oil has reached a position where it can start moving up the food chain instead of just hanging in the water," said Bob Thomas, a biologist at Loyola University in New Orleans. "Something likely will eat those oiled larvae ... and then that animal will be eaten by something bigger and so on."

Tiny creatures might take in such low amounts of oil that they could survive, Thomas said. But those at the top of the chain, such as dolphins and tuna, could get fatal "megadoses."

Marine biologists routinely gather shellfish for study. Since the spill began, many of the crab larvae collected have had the distinctive orange oil droplets, said Harriet Perry, a biologist with the University of Southern Mississippi's Gulf Coast Research Laboratory.

"In my 42 years of studying crabs I've never seen this," Perry said.

She wouldn't estimate how much of the crab larvae are contaminated overall, but said about 40 percent of the area they are known to inhabit has been affected by oil from the spill.

Tulane University researchers are investigating whether the splotches also contain toxic chemical dispersants that were spread to break up the oil but have reached no conclusions, biologist Caz Taylor said.

If large numbers of blue crab larvae are tainted, their population is virtually certain to take a hit over the next year and perhaps longer, scientists say.

How large the die-off would be is unclear, Perry said. An estimated 207 million gallons of oil have spewed into the Gulf since an April 20 drilling rig explosion triggered the spill, and thousands of gallons of dispersant chemicals have been dumped.

Scientists will be focusing on crabs because they're a "keystone species" that play a crucial role in the food web as both predator and prey, Perry said.

Richard Condrey, a Louisiana State University oceanographer, said the crabs are "a living repository of information on the health of the environment."

Named for the light-blue tint of their claws, the crabs have thick shells and 10 legs, allowing them to swim and scuttle across bottomlands. As adults, they live in the Gulf's bays and estuaries amid marshes that offer protection and abundant food, including snails, tiny shellfish, plants and even smaller crabs. In turn, they provide sustenance for a variety of wildlife, from redfish to raccoons and whooping cranes.

Adults could be harmed by direct contact with oil and from eating polluted food. But scientists are particularly worried about the vulnerable larvae.

That's because females don't lay their eggs in sheltered places, but in areas where estuaries meet the open sea. Condrey discovered several years ago that some even deposit offspring on shoals miles offshore in the Gulf.

The larvae grow as they drift with the currents back toward the estuaries for a month or longer. Many are eaten by predators, and only a handful of the 3 million or so eggs from a single female live to adulthood.

But their survival could drop even lower if the larvae run into oil and dispersants.

"Crabs are very abundant. I don't think we're looking at extinction or anything close to it," said Taylor, one of the researchers who discovered the orange spots.

Still, crabs and other estuary-dependent species such as shrimp and red snapper could feel the effects of remnants of the spill for years, Perry said.

"There could be some mortality, but how much is impossible to say at this point," said Vince Guillory, biologist manager with the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries.

Perry, Taylor and Condrey will be among scientists monitoring crabs for negative effects such as population drop-offs and damage to reproductive capabilities and growth rates.

Crabs are big business in the region. In Louisiana alone, some 33 million pounds are harvested annually, generating nearly $300 million in economic activity, Guillory said.

But fishermen who can make a six-figure income off crabs in a good year now are now idled – and worried about the future.

"If they'd let us go out and fish today, we'd probably catch crabs," said Glen Despaux, 37, who sets his traps in Louisiana's Barataria Bay. "But what's going to happen next year, if this water is polluted and it's killing the eggs and the larvae? I think it's going to be a long-term problem."

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BARATARIA, La. (AP) — To assess how heavy a blow the BP oil spill has dealt the Gulf of Mexico, researchers are closely watching a staple of the seafood industry and primary indicator of the eco...
BARATARIA, La. (AP) — To assess how heavy a blow the BP oil spill has dealt the Gulf of Mexico, researchers are closely watching a staple of the seafood industry and primary indicator of the eco...
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10:49 PM on 08/10/2010
"Only when the last tree has withered, the last fish has been caught, and the last river has been poisoned, will you realize you cannot eat money." — Cree Proverb
05:14 PM on 08/10/2010
Sure, the Multinationals say it's say. it must be safe, right?

how many times to you serfs need to be told that something is safe, only to find out later, it deadly?

When giant self serving companies and the USA plutocracy they have purchased

tells you anything,

why do you believe it?
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sven1olaf
Liberty and Justice for all!
09:11 AM on 08/10/2010
i wish i were surprised by any of this.

carry on people, nothing to see here.
09:54 PM on 08/09/2010
those crabs in that picture wil make some goooood gumbo
09:48 PM on 08/10/2010
Not if they're laced with oil and dispersants.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BannedNBoston
Is hemp legal yet?
06:35 PM on 08/09/2010
Hi Mammon,
Your right they arent testing for corexit.
They could test for glycols but they wont go to any trouble to track it down.
A toxicologist said fish exposed to small amounts of corexit died two weeks later but the EPA test is how many die in 48 hours.
04:48 PM on 08/09/2010
Up to half of the oil is in the Gulf right now. Carol Browner has acted like the EPA did after 9/11. Remember how EPA said the air was safe to breathe. The spin from our govenment on this oil disaster is a disaster of its own. I understand why a government might want to understate a problem. I truly don't understand why Presidents and their people refuse to speak truthfully about matters of vital interests to the country. Carol Browner has brought shame on herself and shown the EPA is not competent.
03:58 PM on 08/09/2010
Post 2
I hope anyone else seeing these plumes with access to trawling or diving interest will consider doing the same. We need to know what is happening when the organisms come into contact with these intact plumes. You can read the exchange that Gulf Coast Diver and I had here on Huffpost here: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/GulfCoastDiver?action=comments. My personality at the time was snowballinhell which was kicked out last week by Huffpost through a technical glitch. Please help us out if you know anyone who can.
03:53 PM on 08/09/2010
post 1 Here is some related news. More birds, turtles and dolphins are being found oiled and either dead and dying or rescued. This now three weeks after the oil well was 'capped' and the declaration that the oil is gone. I assume that the turtles, birds and dolphins encounter the oil at the surface, but below when they dive while searching for food. No doubt the food is affected as well. Well, duh!
http://www.nola.com/news/gulf-oil-spill/index.ssf/2010/08/oil_spill_plugged_but_more_oil.html

Is the oil now going under the surface? I think so, based on the photos I see on this website:http://theamericanzombie.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2010-07-31T00%3A08%3A00-05%3A00. At the bottom of this page there are numerous photos taken offshore of the Mississippi Gulf Coast. That's where I grew up and spent so much time offshore. There are clearly smaller plumes (compared to the x miles by x miles in deepwater offshore) inside the barrier islands (Ship and Cat Islands to be exact - heading towards Gulfport) inside the Mississippi Sound. Mississippi Sound is the nursery and cradle for crabs, shrimp and zillions of larval fish species that will eventually go out into the deep Gulf and ultimately into the Atlantic Ocean. I have asked a diver in Florida to see if he can find similar plumes and either dive into (beneath) or trawl them to see if these plumes are actively killing sea life.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BannedNBoston
Is hemp legal yet?
04:15 PM on 08/09/2010
As Dr.Samantha Joye says in her speech: 02 is not taken down to zero by microbial actions because they cannot go there. It isn't in their comfort zone so before those levels are reached the activity declines precipitously and thus 02 is not depleted in the water column, although it could still be deadly for higher organisms. I have no faith in the exposure to dispersants not being involved, but since there is no test for the chemicals it lets NOAA and EPA off the hook.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fLuUXEsxsIc&feature=related

To me this is what makes the oil plumes so deadly. They carry deoxygenated water and decomposed oil and chemicals into all the life zones in the water exposing the entire web of life to damage.
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03:29 PM on 08/09/2010
Don't light the match to that candle for your romantic dinner from the sea.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
HLL
Women, their rights & nothing less ~ SusanBAnthony
02:29 PM on 08/09/2010
"Ah mercy, mercy me
Ah things ain't what they used to be, no no
Oil wasted on the ocean and upon our seas,
fish full of mercury..."

~ Marvin Gaye, 'Mercy Mercy Me,' 1971
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02:04 PM on 08/09/2010
Perhaps the propagandists for British Petroleum would like to go on a seafood diet for a hundred years, until all of this poison is finally out of the biosphere? They and their claims of "pristine beaches" are sickening.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Animal Compassion
12:44 PM on 08/09/2010
Do not trust the US Government to tell you the truth about the state of the seafood in the Gulf. Ask the local fishermen and women only. They will tell the truth...I hope.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
up2uamerica
12:03 PM on 08/09/2010
OK it doesn't take a scientist to know that if you dump millions of barrels of oil into the water and sink it all to the bottom that it will effect the food chain and wild life for decades. Wait, does BP know about this?
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Almondo
Agnostic Realist Tradevknaught
12:40 PM on 08/09/2010
Yes, and they are overwhelmed right now but they will deny it as soon as they can.
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02:05 PM on 08/09/2010
They have already been denying it.