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Gulf Oil Spill: Coral Death 'Definitively' Linked To BP Spill

Gulf Coral Oil Spill

First Posted: 03/26/2012 4:01 pm Updated: 05/26/2012 5:12 am

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — After months of laboratory work, scientists say they can definitively finger oil from BP's blown-out well as the culprit for the slow death of a once brightly colored deep-sea coral community in the Gulf of Mexico that is now brown and dull.

In a study published Monday, scientists say meticulous chemical analysis of samples taken in late 2010 proves that oil from BP PLC's out-of-control Macondo well devastated corals living about 7 miles southwest of the well. The coral community is located over an area roughly the size of half a football field nearly a mile below the Gulf's surface.

The damaged corals were discovered in October 2010 by academic and government scientists, but it's taken until now for them to declare a definite link to the oil spill.

Most of the Gulf's bottom is muddy, but coral colonies that pop up every once in a while are vital oases for marine life in the chilly ocean depths. The injured and dying coral today has bare skeleton, loose tissue and is covered in heavy mucous and brown fluffy material, the paper said.

"It was like a graveyard of corals," said Erik Cordes, a biologist at Temple University who went down to the site in the Alvin research submarine.

So far, this has been the only deep-sea coral site found to be seriously damaged by the spill.

On April 20, 2010, the well blew out about 50 miles off the Louisiana coast, leading to the death of 11 workers aboard the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig and the nation's largest offshore spill. More than 200 million gallons of oil were released.

"They figured (the coral damage) was the result of the spill, now we can say definitely it was connected to the spill," said Helen White, a chemical oceanographer with Haverford College and the lead researcher.

She said pinpointing the BP well as the source of the contamination required sampling sediment on the sea floor and figuring out what was oil from natural seeps in the Gulf and what was from the Macondo well. Finally, the researchers matched the oil found on the corals with oil that came out of the BP well.

Also, the researchers concluded that the damage was caused by the spill because an underwater plume of oil was tracked passing by the site in June 2010. The paper also noted that a decade of deep-sea coral research in the Gulf had not found coral dying in this manner. The coral was documented for the first time when researchers went looking for oil damage in 2010.

The findings were published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The scientists said that they have gone back to the dying corals by submarine since 2010, but that they are not ready to talk about what they've seen at the site.

However, Charles Fisher, a biologist with Penn State University who's led the coral expeditions, said recovery of the damaged site would be slow.

"Things happen very slowly in the deep sea; the temperatures are low, currents are low, those animals live hundreds of years and they die slowly," he said. "It will take a while to know the final outcome of this exposure."

BP did not immediately comment on the study.

The researchers said the troubled spot consists of 54 coral colonies. The researchers were able to fully photograph and assess 43 of those colonies, and of those, 86 percent were damaged. They said 10 coral colonies showed signs of severe stress on 90 percent of the coral.

White, the lead researcher, said that this coral site was the only one found southwest of the Macondo well so far, but that others may exist. The researchers also wrote in the paper that it was too early to rule out serious damage at other coral sites that may have seemed healthy during previous examinations after the April 2010 spill.

Jerald Ault, a fish and coral reef specialist at the University of Miami who was not part of the study, said the findings were cause for concern because deep-sea corals are important habitat. He said there are many links between animals that live at the surface, such as tarpon and menhaden, and life at the bottom of the Gulf. Ecosystem problems can play out over many years, he said.

"It's kind of a tangled web of impact," he said.

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NEW ORLEANS (AP) — After months of laboratory work, scientists say they can definitively finger oil from BP's blown-out well as the culprit for the slow death of a once brightly colored deep-sea cor...
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — After months of laboratory work, scientists say they can definitively finger oil from BP's blown-out well as the culprit for the slow death of a once brightly colored deep-sea cor...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joe Bowers
12:29 AM on 05/14/2012
I hate the oil companies, but in this case people shouldn't really be blaming BP. The oil was already there under the seabed. BP didn't put it there, they just popped a hole in the ground and it bubbled up. Frankly it's no different from a natural disaster. An earthquake could have caused the same result.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Thomas Patrick Sullivan
In Lak`ech, (Mayan) “I am another yourself.”
12:49 AM on 04/18/2012
Our government has the power of life and death. To wantonly allow BP to kill harmless, defenseless, coral reefs who otherwise live for hundreds of years is shameful and sad. For Senator David Vitter to block a pay raise for Interior Secretary Salazar unless he he caved on drilling permits is criminal. Charged but not punished. Vitter will have a lot to answer when he meets his Maker.

No human being, no matter how rich or poor, capable or not, what they do or don't, gets a free pass; of that I'm sure.
mistergg69
obama 2012
10:18 PM on 03/28/2012
GOP energy plan: DRILL BABY DRILL, SPILL BABY SPILL, POLLUTE BABY POLLUTE
09:31 PM on 03/28/2012
Helen is a pretty big deal around here. She knows what she's talking about.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
arachne646
No more hurting people--Peace
01:20 AM on 03/28/2012
That huge vent of oil that spewed out of the earth for months did not disappear into the water when dispersant was sprayed onto it. It was merely moved out of sight, to the ocean floor or mixed up with the water in smaller droplets. Very convenient for BP, but there's no reason to believe that the oil has stopped having ill effects on life in the Gulf.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Reno Fickler
Head Lifeguard/Dead Sea Marina
08:51 PM on 03/27/2012
Healthy coral reefs, then a 200 million gallon oil leak and dead coral reefs.
And people say there is no such thing as a coincidence.
It's not nice to fool Mother Nature.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
john c fairfax
Underwater filmmaker and investigative researcher
08:13 PM on 03/27/2012
Oil used to float on top of water.
Many toxic components of oil are removed and eventually drain into waterways.
A lot of water from waterways would pass by the impacted coral so how can just the BP spill be pinpointed?
What does the relevant coral look like after it dies naturally, or does it live forever?
What is killing other coral in Gulf reef waters, and worldwide for that matter?
Incorrect diagnosis can have fatal consequences.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Reno Fickler
Head Lifeguard/Dead Sea Marina
08:41 PM on 03/27/2012
I wonder who signs your paycheck and what company's name is on it?
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john c fairfax
Underwater filmmaker and investigative researcher
10:47 PM on 03/27/2012
No need to get personal.
Do tell, what is killing coral worldwide?
06:41 PM on 03/27/2012
If you listen to Obama everything is back to normal in the Gulf of Mexico, and ready for a whole new set of oil leases, as he bragged in his speech before the big-oil boys in Oklahoma last week.
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nbk4real
practice Aloha
10:53 AM on 03/28/2012
yeah Obama is the big oil man........please, for everyones sake, maybe you should go get a mental eval...
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DANIELISTICALL
HISTORY IS BUT A FABLE AGREED UPON,,NAPOLEON
06:06 PM on 03/27/2012
STATE OF THE SOUND
Toxic effects linger.

In the 1989 spill, crude oil spread across Alaska's coastal seas covering 10,000 square miles, an area the size of Connecticut, Delaware, Rhode Island, and 25 Washington, D.C.’s combined!
Within a week, currents and winds pushed the slick 90 miles from the site of the tanker, out of Prince William Sound into the Gulf of Alaska. It eventually reached nearly 600 miles away from the wreck contaminating 1,500 miles of shoreline-- about the length of California's coast To the naked eye, Prince William Sound may appear “normal.” But if you look beneath the surface, oil continues to contaminate beaches, national parks, and designated wilderness. In fact, the Office of Technology Assessment estimated beach cleanup and oil skinning only recovered 3-4% of the Exxon Valdez oil and studies by government scientists estimated that only 14% of the oil was removed during cleanup operations.
A decade later, the ecosystem still suffers. Substantial contamination of mussel beds persists and this remarkably unweathered oil is a continuing source of toxic hydrocarbons. Sea otters, river otters, Barrow’s goldeneyes, and harlequin ducks have showed evidence of continued hydrocarbon exposure in the past few years.
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arachne646
No more hurting people--Peace
01:12 AM on 03/28/2012
This is exactly why a pipeline for the tar sands bitumen is so insane! A port for supertankers from Asia on the much harder to navigate fiords of the BC coast is simply not acceptable.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Vernie Taylor
05:20 PM on 03/27/2012
This is exactly why the only energy policy worth pursuing in earnest is a national policy focusing on green/renewable energy. We obviously have to keep producing and exploring for fossil fuel, but oil, gas, and coal are not the answer for America's future. In the short term, fossil fuels are cheaper to obtain but the reality of their environmental impact, and the price of even the smallest accidents in that industry, makes their use much more expensive in the long run. Have no fear, the pipeline will be built but we need to make a national push for less consumption and greener alternative which will inspire the public imagination like the space race of the 1960s. The sooner we begin to make the transfer in our public consciousness to a greener sustainable economy the better. The actual transition to a greener economy will have to be measured in decades but we will eventually get there, ... I hope.
05:12 PM on 03/27/2012
In drilling, there should be some collected money first as insurance that there won't be a spill. If the oil company wants to have its money back, then it has to be extra careful in its operations. Collect first, litigate later. If there is a spill and the fund is not enough to cover it, litigate for the difference. They need to feel the pain personally. Remove the corporate veil.
04:28 PM on 03/27/2012
The poor Coral cannot collect a settlement from BP nor can it recover for 500 years.. all because they were too lazy to do maintenance on their equipment and take care of safety measures in a proper manner.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Play4tdy
05:45 PM on 03/27/2012
Poor coral? Are you serious? Drill baby, drill!
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nbk4real
practice Aloha
10:55 AM on 03/28/2012
drill baby drill = low IQ bumper sticker mentality...smart people are saying "invent baby invent"...
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DANIELISTICALL
HISTORY IS BUT A FABLE AGREED UPON,,NAPOLEON
06:01 PM on 03/27/2012
FANNED from NEW ORLEANS
drill baby drill is useless
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CitizenPane
Why isn't phonetic spelled the way it sounds?
04:23 PM on 03/27/2012
I was down at the Gulf Coast during the oil spill. There were so many bs lines from bp but one of my favorites was telling the people that the oil was like putting sugar in their iced tea. It would just dissolve. One would have to be missing their entire frontal lobe to believe that story. At the simplest level, if sugar dissolved in tea in the manner they stated there would be no point in adding sugar to your tea because you wouldn't be able to taste it. At a barely higher level, mix oil with water (yes you can try this at home) and you will see that they don't mix.
01:38 PM on 03/27/2012
How can you buy or sell the sky - the warmth of the land? .... We do not own the freshness of the air or the SPARKLE OF THE WATER .... When the buffalos are all slaughtered, the wild horses all tamed.... the views of the ripe hills blotted by talking wires, where is the thicket? Gone. Where is the eagle? Gone. Attributed to: CHIEF SEATTLE 1855
01:23 PM on 03/27/2012
If they seized all the assets of BP and everyone else involved in this oil spill it would not be enough compensation for al of the living things that they are responsive for destroying. If you start with the fish and dolphins and count it all the way down to the microrganisms they have destroyed countless billions of living things. On a global scale the destruction is mind boggling. Drill baby Drill ??