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![]() by Brooks Hays Washington DC (UPI) Feb 18, 2021
Ten years after the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded in the Gulf of Mexico, triggering the largest marine oil spill in history, dolphins are still experiencing the immunological effects of exposure, according to a study published Thursday in the journal Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. The new research is only the latest study to show the effects of the Deepwater Horizon spill were larger and longer-lasting than previously estimated -- capable of disrupting entire food webs and even affecting animals on land. Over the last decade, researchers have been regularly capturing, sampling and releasing bottlenose dolphins in Barataria Bay, Louisiana, where oil exposure was extensive. Researchers compared levels of cytokines -- immunological proteins -- in dolphins from Barataria Bay with the immune system profiles of dolphins in Sarasota Bay, which remained oil-free. In the new study, researchers even found evidence that dolphins born after the oil spill host cytokine communities similar to their parents. Scientists were able to replicate the immunological effects of oil exposure in the lab using mice models. They were also able to show oil exposure influenced the immune systems of the next generation of mice, even though the newborn mice were unexposed. "The parallel between findings in dolphins exposed following the Deepwater Horizon spill and laboratory mice experimentally exposed to oil was impressive and really helped build the weight of evidence between oil exposure and specific effects on the immune system," corresponding author Sylvain De Guise said in a news release. "However, the long-term effects and potential for multigenerational effects raise significant concerns for the recovery of dolphin populations following the spill," said De Guise, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Connecticut.
![]() ![]() Fin whale songs could help map the ocean floor Washington DC (UPI) Feb 11, 2021 The fin whale is the loudest species in the ocean. The mammal's long, loud, low-frequency vocalizations can travel for hundreds of miles. Fin whale songs are so strong, in fact, they generate seismic data that can be used to probe the structure and composition of Earth's seafloor. Scientists described the fin whale's potential as a seismic source in a new paper, published Thursday in the journal Science. "The idea to study subsurface signals in whale calls was rather a coincidence ... read more
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