Yahoo – AFP,
Kerry Sheridan, 20 May 2015
Miami (AFP)
- Dolphins swimming in the oil-contaminated waters of the Gulf of Mexico after
the 2010 BP spill suffered unusual lung lesions and died at high rates because
of petroleum pollution, US scientists said Thursday.
The report
in the journal PLOS ONE presents the strongest evidence to date that the
environmental disaster that was unleashed when the BP-leased Deepwater Horizon
rig exploded on April 20, 2010, pouring 4.9 million barrels of oil into the
ocean, was the reason for an unusually high number of dead or dying bottlenose
dolphins washing up on the shores of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama.
![]() |
Crews work
on stopping the flow of oil
at the source site of the Deepwater
Horizon
disaster on May 29, 2010 in the
Gulf of Mexico (AFP Photo/Win Mcnamee)
|
Dolphins
take big, deep breaths right at the surface of the water, where oil sheens are
most concentrated, and "where there is a good chance of inhaling oil
itself," said lead author Stephanie Venn-Watson, a veterinary
epidemiologist at the National Marine Mammal Foundation.
"Dolphins
were negatively impacted by exposure to petroleum compounds following the
Deepwater Horizon oil spill, and exposure to these compounds caused life
threatening adrenal and lung disease that has contributed to increased dolphin
deaths in the northern Gulf of Mexico."
Unusual
lesions
Unusual
lesions in the lungs and adrenal glands, which regulate hormones and stress
response, were a key sign that something was wrong with dolphins in the area of
the spill, according to the research which compared autopsies of 46 dolphins
that were stranded and died in the spill area from June 2010 to August 2012 to
a comparison population of stranded dolphins off the Gulf coast of Florida.
"We
found that dolphins that died after the oil spill had distinct adrenal gland
and lung lesions that were not present in the stranded dolphins from other
areas," said Kathleen Colegrove, a veterinary pathologist at the
University of Illinois.
"These
dolphins had some of the most severe lung lesions I have ever seen in wild
dolphins from throughout the US."
One in
three of the stranded dolphins in the spill area had a thinned adrenal gland
cortex, a rate that was significantly higher than the reference population of
stranded dolphins in Sarasota Bay, Florida, in which one in 10 had such a
condition.
"The
thinning of the adrenal gland cortex was a very unusual abnormality for us,
that has not been previously reported in dolphins in the literature,"
Colegrove told reporters during a conference call to discuss the findings,
which are the latest in a series of research papers on dolphin health in the
region after the spill.
![]() |
Oil seen on
the surface of the water near the site of the BP oil spill, named the
largest
environmental disaster in American history, in the Gulf of Mexico
on June 13,
2010 (AFP Photo/Spencer Platt)
|
Bacterial
pneumonia
One in five
of the oil spill dolphins had bacterial pneumonia, a serious lung disease that
was severe enough to cause or contribute to the animals' deaths.
By
comparison, bacterial pneumonia was found in just one in 50 of the Florida
dolphins to which the autopsies were compared.
Studies in
other animals have shown that inhaling oil can cause adrenal dysfunction, lung
disease and bacterial pneumonia, which Venn-Watson described as "one of
the most common outcomes of chemical inhalation injury in other animals."
Scientists
ruled out other diseases known to have killed dolphins in high numbers in the
past, such as brucellosis and morbillivirus.
They also ruled
out cancers, autoimmune diseases, fungal infections and tuberculosis.
"No
feasible alternative causes remain that can reasonably explain the timing,
location and nature of these distinct lesions," said Venn-Watson.
A 2013
study on cetaceans in Louisiana's Barataria Bay, found that dolphins were
missing teeth, had lung lesions and high prevalence of disease after the worst
oil spill in US history.
While
researchers lacked a baseline study of dolphin health in Barataria Bay before
the oil spill, they said the combination of live and dead dolphin analyses,
including the latest study, have provided a strong body of evidence.
"We
feel that this study is a critical link in the chain," said Venn-Watson.
BP
disputes
![]() |
A line of
orange oil booms lie on the
beach to block oil from the BP
Deepwater Horizon
spill in Grand Isle,
Louisiana on June 4, 2010 (AFP
Photo/Saul Loeb)
|
More than
1,200 dolphins have washed up in area of the Gulf of Mexico affected by the
spill since April 29, 2010.
An
additional 114 were stranded from February, two months prior to the spill,
until April 20, according to figures from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA).
In response
to the study, BP took issue with the scientific findings.
"This
new paper fails to show that the illnesses observed in some dolphins were
caused by exposure to Macondo oil," said Geoff Morell, BP senior vice
president for US communications and external affairs.
"According
to NOAA, the Gulf 'unusual mortality event' (UME) began in February 2010,
months before the spill," he added.
"Even
though the UME may have overlapped in some areas with the oil spill,
correlation is not evidence of causation."




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