ST.JOHNS - A Memorial University professor says migratory birds that return to Newfoundland and Labrador each year are being killed by oil spilling into the Gulf of Mexico. Every spring tens of thousands of white gannets circle the bluffs of the Cape St. Mary's Bird Sanctuary, southwest of St. John's. There are also large gannet colonies in Quebec. They come north to nest, lay eggs and raise their chicks.
Many of them migrate from the southern U.S., where the BP well has been spilling millions of gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico since April 20.
"We know our birds are dying there," said professor and seabird researcher Bill Montevecchi.
"You know, we can feel the long reach of that oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, here in Eastern Canada. What we do know is that some of our gannets are being oiled and the birds I've seen [pictures of from the Gulf of Mexico] are so heavily oiled that they are going to sink in a day or two."
Montevecchi and other bird scientists are planning to attach satellite tags to some birds in Newfoundland this summer in order to track them and see how they fare when they return to the Gulf next fall.
"It seems to me it's just responsible to find out what's happening to our birds that are going back there from eastern Canada."
He worries birds that head south from Canada will land in oily water in the Gulf and die.
"Going by the birds I've seen already, the most humane thing to do would be euthanasia. They are so covered with oil there is no way they are going to survive. It's a total assault on their body. It shuts down their oil glands. They ingest it, they absorb it. You can clean them on the outside but they are dying on the inside," said Montevecchi.
He said there is also fear that the oil spill in the Gulf may harm marine mammals, such as humpback whales, that come to Eastern Canada annually. The Cape St. Mary's Bird Sanctuary is a popular tourist attraction in the spring and summer months when gannets are there.
"It's really quite a tragedy that I hadn't contemplated until we arrived here," said John Carol of Milton, Ont., who was at the sanctuary on Wednesday. "What it really points out is the international implications of a disaster thousands of miles away."....The blot on the planet keeps spreading.
I am both disgusted and saddened at BP and their fat cats for lack of progress. Tarballs are now washing up on Florida beaches and the once white sand...no more as the oil continues to spread.
ReplyDeleteAnimals continue to suffer and die while BP points fingers instead of admitting they were wrong and trying to remedy it.
Why have they not offered to pay for the clean up that Florida and the other southern states will have to do?
Lina
BP has offer some monies to help with the clean up and the people are getting sick and afraid to say anything because they will lose their jobs...so for the people it's damn if they do and damn if they don't, it's a no win situation.
ReplyDeleteThis epidemic is spreading world wide, just think , in a very short time it will spead into open waters .
We don't have to wait on Global Warming ...mankind is doing it quite well and we are at the edge of destroying ourselves.
Great post PIC...Thankyou