BP Oil Spill: Daily Dead Wildlife Tally

BP Oil Spill: Daily Dead Wildlife Tally
84 Days After Spill (http://dailydeadbirds.com/archive.html)

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Introduction to Marine Oil Spills

706 million gallons: the amount of waste oil that enters the marine environment per year. Oil can enter the oceans through many different passages, but the majority of oil that enters the ocean originates from "land based sources and from unregulated recreational boating" (Oil Spills: Impact on the Ocean). Other forms of oil entering the marine environment include drainage of storm water that contains components of oil and improper treatment of waste disposal. Tanker crashes and other transportation accidents accommodate for 5.2% of oil that exists in the oceans, routine repairs and maintenance of ships make up 20%, and 13% of the oil within the oceans come from "hydrogen particles from online air pollution", and 8% is due to the natural uplifting of oil from the ocean floor (Oil Spills: Impact on the Ocean).

The gravity of marine oil spills relies on many factors. Factors that influence the severity of marine oil spills include "the type and quantity of oil spilled, the season and weather, the type of shoreline, and the type of waves and tidal energy in the area of the spill" (Effects of Oil Spills on Wildlife and Habitat). Because the density of oil is less than 1g/mL (the density of water), oil floats on the surface of the ocean and coats the water as a sheen. The intensity of waves, currents, and winds can expand the coverage of oil to larger areas in the marine environment. 

The way oil affects the environment physically, chemically, and biologically is called weathering, and weathering can actually reduce the harmful toxins in oil over time. Other forms that diminish oil from the marine environment include evaporation, decomposition by sunlight (photolysis), and decomposition by microorganisms (biodegradation). Biodegradation relies on the availability of nutrients and oxygen, the type of microorganism, and the temperature.  In addition, small amounts of waste oil dissolve in the ocean waters. 

Sources: 
http://alaska.fws.gov/media/unalaska/Oil%20Spill%20Fact%20Sheet.pdf
http://www.waterencyclopedia.com/Oc-Po/Oil-Spills-Impact-on-the-Ocean.html

6 comments:

  1. What would you do o reduce the amount of oil spills that are caused by recreational boating?

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  2. Where do the 706 million gallons enter the marine environment? Is it uniformly widespread or concentrated in certain areas? Are any oceans affected the most?

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  3. Are there any consequences for the companies that are causing these spills? Or are they just getting away with it?

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  4. How can the oil companies get the oil out of the water?

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  5. How are the oil companies that caused this oil spill in the first place going to fix there mess? And when? Its not like we can just sit around and wait we have to act now more and more animals are getting caused by the oil spill and dying. We have ruined jobs for hard working americans and destroyed homes to the sea life animals.

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  6. How do these oil companies plan on fixing their messes? Also what are the consequences for the oil companies that do spill oil?

    ReplyDelete