NEW ORLEANS (AP) The vast 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill damaged the tiny animals that live on the sea floor for about 57 square miles (147 sq. kilometers) around the blown-out BP oil well, with severe damage in about nine square miles (23 sq. kilometers) of that area, says a researcher from Texas A&M-Corpus Christi.
Pollution and damage to animal life was severe nearly two miles (about 3 kms) from the wellhead and identifiable more than 10 miles (16 kms) away, Paul Montagna wrote in a report published Tuesday in the online journal PLOS One.
Montagna, a professor of ecosystems and modeling, said the refrigerator-cold water a mile (1.6 kms) beneath the surface means oil takes longer to decay than in shallower waters, where spill recovery has taken years to decades. That means full recovery could take a generation or more, he said in an interview Tuesday.
"This is the first large-scale examination of the impact on the soft bottom, which is the largest habitat in deep water," said Robert Carney, a deep-sea ecologist and professor in Louisiana State University's department of oceanography and coastal sciences. Carney, who was not part of this study, said Wednesday that it was well done.
He said he wasn't surprised by the extent of the damage, given the size and reach of the plume of oil. BP PLC's Macondo well blew wild for nearly three months starting April 20, 2010, when an explosion on the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig killed 11 workers.