Fishers and scientists have been finding deformed and ill marine life since November 2010 – just seven months after the catastrophic BP oil spill in the Mexican Gulf and the release of dispersants. After the oil rig explosion on 20 April 2010, BP used at least 1.9 million gal of toxic dispersants, which are known to be mutagenic, to sink the oil.
The findings of Dr Jim Cowan with Louisiana State University’s Department of Oceanography and Coastal Sciences replicate those of others along the Gulf Coast. Brown oily foam washing ashore in Bayou La Batre. (Photos: Louisiana Environmental Action Network )
Fishers, scientists and seafood processors say they continue to find high numbers of eyeless crabs and shrimp, underdeveloped blue crabs lacking claws and fish with oozing sores they believe are to blame on the dispersants, Global Research reports.
“The dispersants used in BP’s draconian experiment contain solvents, such as petroleum distillates and 2-butoxyethanol. Solvents dissolve oil, grease and rubber,” said Dr Riki Ott, a toxicologist, marine biologist and Exxon Valdez survivor, Al Jazeera reports.
As shrimp and other species have a life-cycle short enough that two to three generations have existed since BP’s disaster began, the chemicals have been able to enter the genome and cause deformities. Dispersants are also teratogenic – they can disturb the growth and development of an embryo or fetus – and carcinogenic. Collecting samples at Gulf. (Photos:Dr. Samantha Joye/oilspill.uga.edu)
Cowan believes chemicals called polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), released from BP’s submerged oil, are likely to blame for the sick wildlife.
The fish are from “a wide distribution that is spatially coordinated with oil from the Deepwater Horizon, both surface oil and subsurface oil. A lot of the oil that impacted Louisiana was also in subsurface plumes, and we think there is a lot of it remaining on the seafloor,” he explained.
Marine scientist Samantha Joye of the University of Georgia made submarine dives around the source area of BP’s oil disaster. She found colossal blankets of oil coating the seafloor and oil-covered bottom-dwelling sea creatures.
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