After Deepwater Horizon spill, scientists focus on food web

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Deepwater Horizon spill
In this U.S. Department of Defense photo, oil from the Deepwater Horizon spill moves toward Barataria Bay, in the lower center of the photo, in 2010. (Rutgers University photo)

NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. — A new study from a Coastal Waters Consortium team of researchers led by Rutgers University postdoctoral researcher, Michael McCann, has found which birds, fish, insects and other animals affected by the Deepwater Horizon explosion should be given top priority for conservation, protection and research.

Until now scientists didn’t know which kinds of animals were most affected and what impact their collective fates had on the food chain after the offshore oil rig Deepwater Horizon exploded in 2010 and dumped 4.9 million barrels of oil into Louisiana’s salt marshes.

“There were lots of studies about who eats whom, and about what species are sensitive to oil,” says Olaf Jensen, professor of marine and coastal sciences in the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences, and co-author of the study.

“We put those together and asked, ‘Who is both important in the food web and really sensitive to oil?’”

Protection

These are the species most in need of protection because their loss can have ripple effects throughout the food chain, said Jensen.

The study, published this month in Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, in which the team of scientists from Rutgers University, Louisiana State University, Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium, University of North Carolina, East Carolina University, and Stony Brook University constructed a marsh food web for Barataria Bay, Louisiana.

The study found that killifish played a key role in the food web and fared relatively well in the wake of the spill.

The researchers determined that terns, gulls and wading birds, such as herons, were both sensitive to oil and so extensively connected to other animals as prey and predator that their loss would impact other species in the food chain.

Some studies indicate that the mortality among terns and gulls in Barataria Bay was as high as 32 percent.

“We didn’t just want to find winners and losers from the effects of the spill,” says McCann, the study’s lead author, now a scientist at the Nature Conservancy but a Rutgers postdoctoral researcher when the study was done.

Food web

“We wanted to find out what role each kind of animal would play in how a food web responds to something like this oil spill,” he said.

Some animals, such as roundworms, were found to be highly sensitive to the oil, but were not considered to be critical to the food chain because they are not highly connected to other animals as prey or predator.

Finally, the scientists identified several species as key to the saltmarsh ecosystem that should be considered top priorities for future research. Blue crabs were among such animals.

“Our analysis identified blue crab as one of the most important species in the Louisiana salt marshes because they eat or are eaten by nearly every other animal in this environment,” says co-author Michael Polito, assistant professor of oceanography and coastal studies at Louisiana State University College of the Coast and Environment.

“As the sensitivity of blue crabs to oil is still unclear, future work is needed to clarify how oil spills might affect this important species and result in changes throughout the salt marsh ecosystem,” Polito said.

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