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Environmental

Florida lawmakers lay groundwork for natural gas “frack

Image - Florida lawmakers lay groundwork for natural gas “frack

State Rep. Ray Rodrigues, R-Estero, says that “every indication is at some point in the future” fr

Saturday, 9 March 2013 COMMENTS

Oil Spill

BP faces escalating spill payouts after court ruling

Image - BP faces escalating spill payouts after court ruling

BP must keep paying certain types of oil spill compensation in much larger amounts and to more par

Saturday, 9 March 2013 COMMENTS

People

Many vets seek help after being sexually abused

Image - Many vets seek help after being sexually abused

WASHINGTON — More than 85,000 veterans were treated last year for injuries or illness

Tuesday, 21 May 2013 COMMENTS

Politics

Oklahoma Tornado: Crews comb devastation; confirmed dea

Image - Oklahoma Tornado: Crews comb devastation; confirmed dea

Rescue teams combed through pulverized buildings and splintered homes early Tuesday after on

Tuesday, 21 May 2013 COMMENTS

A study on possible effects of the 2010 BP oil spill indicates dispersants may have killed plankton - some of the ocean's tiniest plants and creatures - and disrupted the food chain in the Gulf of Mexico.

Scientists who read the study said it points toward major future effects of the spill. One called its findings scary.

For the study, Alabama researchers pumped water from Mobile Bay into 53-gallon drums, then added oil, dispersant or both in proportions found during the oil spill to simulate the spill's effects on microscopic water-life in the bay.

Over more than 12 weeks in 2010, BP's well spewed nearly 200 million gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico. The company used more than 1.8 million gallons of dispersants - more than 770,000 gallons of it at the oil's source on the ocean floor - to break up the oil into tiny droplets.

The researchers found that, within days, the numbers of plant-like phytoplankton and ciliates - plankton that use hairlike cilia to move - increased under an oil slick. But they dropped significantly in the drums with dispersant or dispersed oil, while the numbers of bacteria increased. The study was published Tuesday in PLoS ONE, one of the peer-reviewed journals in the online Public Library of Science.


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