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Home / World

Dolphins suffer miscarriages, lose teeth after BP oil spill - researchers

Independent
17 Feb, 2014 07:14 PM2 mins to read

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Half of the 32 dolphins studied were judged to be seriously ill or in danger of dying. Photo / Thinkstock

Half of the 32 dolphins studied were judged to be seriously ill or in danger of dying. Photo / Thinkstock

Bottlenose dolphins with deformities including missing teeth and lung disease were found in the Gulf of Mexico a year after the BP oil spill, according to US researchers.

The mammals were also suffering from hormonal imbalances, Pneumonia and liver disease, while a pregnant female was found carrying a dead foetus.

The first major study into the health of dolphins comes after the Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded in April 2010 and saw the equivalent of 4.9 million barrels of oil gush into the sea.

During the study, researchers briefly captured dolphins off the coast of central Louisiana in 2011 to check their health.

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Half of the 32 dolphins studied were judged to be seriously ill or in danger of dying.

The health of the animals was compared with 27 bottlenose dolphins from the Sarasota Bay, Florida, which was unaffected by the oil spill.

These dolphins had significantly lower levels of adrenal hormones, which are critical to an animal's stress response, while moderate to severe lung disease was five times more common in Louisianan dolphins.

"I've never seen such a high prevalence of very sick animals," lead author Lori Schwacke, a researcher with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and an expert on dolphins in the southern US.

"There is disease in any wild population. We just haven't seen animals that were in such bad shape as what we saw in Barataria Bay," she added.

Three of the Barataria Bay dolphins had also lost nearly all their teeth, and three others had just half of their normal number of teeth left. Dolphins typically have between 78 and 106 teeth.

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A brown pelican is cleaned after being rescued from oil-tainted waters near Buras, Louisiana. Photo / AP
Oil cleanup workers scour the beach for tar balls in Orange Beach, Alabama. Photo / AP
Elaine Jesmer, left, and Heather Crosson, both of Los Angeles, hold signs during a protest against BP PLC organized by Moveon.org outside an ARCO gas station in Los Angeles. Photo / AP
Tar balls sit on the beach in Orange Beach, Alabama. Photo / AP
Mickal Vogt uses a stick to place tar balls in a jar that washed up on the shore in Orange Beach, Alabama. Photo / AP
Workers clean up oil from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in Pass a Loutre, Louisiana. Photo / AP
Oil absorbent material boom and oil is seen on rocks at a land bridge built by the Louisiana National Guard to hold back oil from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill on Elmer's Island. Photo / AP
Oil booms are seen in the midst of oil from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill near the South Pass of the Mississippi River along the Louisiana coast near Venice La, Louisiana. Photo / AP
Tourists watch as workers clean the sand along a 700-yard long strip of oil that washed up on the beach in Gulf Shores, Alabama. Photo / AP
Boat captain Preston Morris shows the oil on his hands while collecting surface samples from the oil impacted marsh of Pass a Loutre, Louisiana. Photo / AP
The first sea turtle rescued from the Gulf of Mexico oil spill - a baby Kemp's ridley - lies, all soaped up, in its wading pool bathtub. Photo / AP
Oil from the leaking rig is seen swirling through the currents in the Gulf of Mexico. Photo / AP
14-month-old Hannah Cooney plays in the sand at Dauphin Island, Alabama, as workers look for evidence of BP's oil spill reaching the shore. Photo / AP
A  shrimp boat is used to collect oil with booms in the waters of Chandeleur Sound, Louisiana. Photo / AP.
A small pollution containment chamber, known as a 'top hat' is lowered into the Gulf of Mexico in Port Fourchon, Louisiana, on May 11. On May 12 the top hat was found on the sea floor near the gushing oil leak. Photo / AP
Oil retention booms lie tangled in the growth near the nests of young brown pelicans on New Harbour Island in the Gulf of Mexico. Photo / AP
Rachel Lackey wears a skeleton mask during a rally against BP PLC and the Gulf oil spill in Jackson Square in the French Quarter of New Orleans. Photo / AP
BP CEO Tony Hayward stands aboard the Discover Enterprise drill ship during recovery operations at the Deepwater Horizon oil spill site in the Gulf of Mexico. Photo / AP
Photographers take pictures of Sally Newman, center, covered in a mixture of water and paint resembling oil during a demonstration at a BP gas station. Photo / AP
President Barack Obama picks up a 'tar ball' during a tour of areas impacted by the Gulf Coast oil spill. Photo / AP
An image made from video released by British Petroleum shows equipment being used to try and plug a gushing oil well in the Gulf of Mexico. Photo / AP
An oil-soaked pelican is seen on an island in Barataria Bay just inside the the coast of Louisiana. Photo / AP
Oil is trapped between two absorbent booms in a marsh impacted by the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill in Pass a Loutre, along the coast of Louisiana. Photo / AP
Pelican eggs that appear to be stained with oil sit in a nest on an island in Barataria Bay in Plaquemines Parish, just inside the the coast of Louisiana. Photo / AP
A sign chastising BP is seen along a highway south of Belle Chasse, Louisiana. Photo / AP
Crude oil from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill washes ashore in Orange Beach, Alabama. Photo / AP

Image 1 of 26: A brown pelican is cleaned after being rescued from oil-tainted waters near Buras, Louisiana. Photo / AP

Oil firm BP said the report, which appeared in December issue of the 'Environmental Science and Technology' journal was "inconclusive as to any causation associated with the spill".

BP also called on NOAA to release all of its data on the unusual deaths of more than 1000 dolphins off the Gulf Coast, dating back to February 2010, three months before the spill.

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Scientists admitted that their study cannot prove that the dolphin's health problems were caused by the Deepwater spill because there were no studies of dolphin health prior to it.

But the Louisiana dolphins had lower levels of pesticides and flame retardant chemicals than the Florida group, suggesting that agricultural runoff and common pollution were not the cause of their diseases, researchers claimed.

- UK Independent

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