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OIL AND GAS
BP oil spill slows swimming speed of juvenile mahi-mahi
by Brooks Hays
Miami (UPI) Jun 23, 2013


High waters cut through Colorado river bank, triggering minor oil spill
Denver (UPI) Jun 23, 2013 - High waters in the Cache la Poudre River in Colorado undercut a bank near an oil storage tank, causing a minor spill, a state regulatory agency said.

Parts of the river in Colorado were under a flood warning in late May because temperatures warmer than the seasonal average caused snowpack to melt more quickly than normal.

Tank operator Noble Energy said it discovered a spill of about 178 barrels last week. The company said Friday the tank was damaged by high waters. The company pulled oil from a second tank as a precaution, though no drinking water was contaminated by the spill.

The Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission said it was notified of the spill Friday. It's working with the Environmental Protection Agency in its response.

Noble Energy in December said the bulk of the company's spending in 2014 would target the Denver-Julesburg basin in Colorado.

The Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission confirmed at least 600 barrels of oil were spilled from operations in the state after more than a foot of rain fell on parts of Colorado last autumn.

Environmental advocacy groups sounded the alarm because of the intensity of oil and gas operations in a state the U.S. Energy Department said has "enormous" deposits of oil and natural gas locked in shale deposits.

Juvenile mahi-mahi -- a favorite fish among foodies and fishermen, and one the fastest in the Gulf of Mexico -- exposed to BP's 2010 oil spill swim at just about half the pace of their uncontaminated, still-speedy brethren.

Researchers at the University of Miami were able to show that when larval mahi-mahi were exposed to oil collected from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, they lost their breakaway zip. Young fish exposed for 48 hours demonstrated a 37 percent decrease in swim speeds. Those exposed for just 24 hours showed a 22 percent dip.

"The worry is that if you have reduced swimming performance you're going to be less effective at capturing prey, and less effective in avoiding [predators]," explained Martin Grosell, a professor of ichthyology at Miami's Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science.

Ichthyology is the field of biology devoted to the study of fish.

"The study demonstrates how careful measurements of physiological performance may reveal subtle, yet highly significant impacts of environmental contamination," added Grosell.

The colorful specimens, also known as dolphinfish, aren't the only species potentially slowed by a coat of oil; research suggests the oil might similarly slow other large fish species, such as tunas, amberjack, swordfish, and billfish.

BP spokesman Ryan Jason discounted the implications of the new research: "The study does not provide any evidence to show that an effect on that group of fish would have had a population-level impact."

The study was published this week in the early online edition of the journal Environmental Science and Technology.

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