
Oil rig in Gulf of Mexico
Since the explosion on the BP Deepwater Horizon drilling rig in the
Gulf of Mexico on April 20, 2010, scientists have been working to
understand the impact that this disaster has had on the environment. For
months, crude oil gushed into the water at a rate of approximately
53,000 barrels per day before the well was capped on July 15, 2010. A
new study confirms that oil from the Macondo well made it into the
ocean's food chain through the tiniest of organisms, zooplankton.
Tiny drifting animals in the ocean, zooplankton are useful to track
oil-derived pollution. They serve as food for baby fish and shrimp and
act as conduits for the movement of oil contamination and pollutants
into the food chain. The study confirms that not only did oil affect the
ecosystem in the Gulf during the blowout, but it was still entering the
food web after the well was capped.
Oil, which is a complex mixture of hydrocarbons and other chemicals,
contains polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), which can be used to
fingerprint oil and determine its provenance. The researchers were able
to identify the signature unique to the Deep Water Horizon well in the
Gulf of Mexico.
The team's research indicates that the fingerprint of the Deepwater
Horizon oil spill could be found in some zooplankton in the Gulf of
Mexico ecosystem at low levels, as much as a month after the leaking
wellhead was capped. In addition, the extent of the contamination seemed
to be patchy. Some zooplankton at certain locations far removed from
the spill showed evidence of contamination, whereas zooplankton in other
locations, sometimes near the spill, showed lower indications of
exposure to the oil-derived pollutants.
"Traces of oil in the zooplankton prove that they had contact with
the oil and the likelihood that oil compounds may be working their way
up the food chain," said Dr. Michael Roman of the University of Maryland
Center for Environmental Science
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