Greetings!
The
Deepwater Horizon oil spill may be seven years in our rearview mirror, but the recently published
results of scientific studies investigating the spill are showing how it impacted -- and is still impacting -- protected and endangered species in the Gulf of Mexico.
The scientific journal,
Endangered Species Research, recently released a special themed issue dedicated to reporting findings of some of the scientific research conducted under the Natural Resource Damage Assessment (NRDA) on protected marine species -- particularly sea turtles and cetaceans, which are all protected under U.S. federal law.
The Sarasota Dolphin Research Program is playing a key role in helping to understand the spill's impacts on dolphin species in the wake of the spill.
How?
We have a 47-year history of research on bottlenose dolphins thanks to our studies of the long-term resident population in Sarasota Bay. Information about our dolphins here is providing important baseline parameters that are helping us measure and understand the oil spill's impacts on dolphins elsewhere.
The spill, which released 3.19 million barrels of oil over 87 days, contaminated more than 112,000 km (nearly 70,000 miles) of surface waters and 2,100 km (1,304 miles) of shoreline. The location of the spill in the northern Gulf of Mexico hosts five sea turtle species and 57 marine mammal stocks of 22 different species.
Hundreds of researchers from numerous agencies spent thousands of hours working in challenging conditions to gather information using a variety of measures, including boat-based and aerial surveys, rescues, veterinary assessments, satellite-linked tracking of live animals during and after the spill and recovery and examination of stranded animals.
The results showed that oil exposure caused a variety of problems -- from reproductive failure to organ damage and death -- and that the spill contributed to the largest and longest marine mammal unusual mortality event ever documented in the Gulf.
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A dolphin health assessment in Barataria Bay, Louisiana. (NOAA photo)
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