http://www.wired.com/2015/05/oil-spill-off-santa-barbara-going-kill/
What the Oil Spill Off Santa Barbara Is Going to
Kill
WIRED
Neel V. Patel Date
of Publication: 05.22.15. 05.22.15
Click to A man shovels up oil on a section of beach
about a mile east of Refugio State Beach, Calif., Wednesday, May 20,
2015. A broken onshore pipeline spewed oil down a storm drain and into
the ocean for several hours Tuesday before it was shut off. Kenneth
Song/The News-Press via AP/SANTA MARIA TIMES OUT
On Tuesday, over 100,000 gallons of oil gushed onto a
nine mile stretch of California coastline. A buried pipeline ruptured
next to a culvert that led to a Santa Barbara beach, sending oil straight
into the water. Government officials have closed both Refugio State Beach
and El Captain State Beach until next Tuesday; it’s the worst oil spill
to hit the Santa Barbara coastline since 1969, when 4.2 million gallons
of oil slicked the Pacific and helped trigger the modern environmental
movement.
This isn't just any beach. In the Santa Barbara Channel, cold water
from the north meets warm water from the south, carrying a mosaic of
unusual species. It’s almost Mediterranean, and it’s rare. Off
California, massive forests of kelpthe largest type of marine
algaecreate “this really cool three-dimensional habitat that harbors
a lot of biodiversity,” says Bob Miller, a marine biologist at UC
Santa Barbara. The seaweed grows up to 130 feet tall and supports more
than 800 species, including infant fish and invertebrates like crabs and
snails. Bigger marine mammals like sea lions and otters often forage for
food through the leaves. When kelp breaks loose and washes up on shore,
arthropods and birds eat it. seagulls, terns, and cormorants forage the
beaches. About 19,000 gray whales migrate through the channel this time
of yearsometimes as close as 100 feet from shore. And the rocky
intertidal areas harbor sea anemones, soft corals, shrimp, muscles,
crabs, and small fish.
But oil screws all of that up. It’s viscous, and depending on temperature
it either oozes everywhere or sticks to everything.
The 14,000 acres of kelp sprawled around the coast captures big gobs of
oil in the canopies, so it settles like a toxic cloud on the algal
forests. If little animals eat the oil they either die, or get eaten by
bigger animals, spreading the toxic stuff through the food web.
Oil that wave action pushes into the rough terrain of the rocky
intertidal zone gets trapped in the natural nooks and small spaces. These
crannies are partially isolated, ecologically speakingthat’s why
tidepools are so cool. But it also means that when damaged by oil, they
can take a much longer time to recover than other marine
environments.
Bird species face some of the biggest risks. Foraging on the beach means
running into oil that washes up on shore, which is like walking into a
tar pit. Brown pelicanswhich spent almost 50 years on the the Federal
List of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife before being removed in
2009dive into the water to hunt for fish, which means they end up diving
headfirst into an oil slick.
Hey, at least the plants and animals down on the bottom will be OK,
right? Sure! Unless an intensely sunny daylike, you know,
Californiawarms the oil enough that it sinks. That’s what happened after
the Exxon Valdez spill in Alaska 25 years ago. People are still digging
crude out of sediment from the ocean floor there.
It’s too early to tell exactly what'll happen off Santa Barbara. Ben
Halpern, a marine conservation researcher at UC Santa Barbara, says the
most visible short term effect will bird deaths from eating oil-related
chemicals. “It’s clearly a disaster, but it will be relatively
contained,” he says. “There will be major impact on the local scale, but
not the regional one.” He predicts much of the oil will be cleaned up
within a year or two, although there will still be pockets of oil that
subsist for many years afterward.
Because many of these toxins directly affect reproductive organs, Miller
says to expect a decrease in overall population over the next few
generations.
On the slightly brighter (albeit ironic) side, UC Santa Barbara has a
killer marine sciences department, and researchers there will be able to
use the spill to study how oil affects the biogeochemistry of marine
ecosystems. “The spill will actually create opportunities,” Miller says.
He’s the head of a program funded by NASA and NOAA to observe and measure
marine biodiversity trends in Santa Barbara, and he’s eager to see what
they can learn from the spill’s aftermath. Other researchers might try
testing oil-eating microbes, or gather data that could help in developing
new technologies for cleanup crews.
By Thursday night, 17 cleanup vessels managed by the company whose
pipeline rupturedPlains All American Pipelinehad managed to slurped up
just about 9,500 gallons. Halpern says he expect the majority of the
spill to be cleaned up in a few weeks, just in time for the last grey
whale stragglers to make their way through the Santa Barbara
Channel.
(805) 962-2571
P.O. Box 92156, Santa Barbara, CA 93190
margie@sbpermaculture.org
http://www.sbpermaculture.org
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