Archives for: June 2010

Tony and the Whale

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jhocevar
A few days ago, a young sperm whale was found dead in the Gulf of Mexico.  The official cause of death has yet to be determined, but it is likely that the enormous quantity of oil pouring into the Gulf from the BP Horizon rig is the culprit. 
 

 
As the news of this finding was first being reported, BP CEO Tony Hayward was testifying before Congress, desperately ducking questions and ducking responsibility for his company's negligence. 
 

 
The whale's death puts the population of sperm whales that live in the Gulf at risk of extinction.  US government scientists have estimated that the loss of as few as three adult whales due to the spill might be enough to cause them to die out in the Gulf of Mexico.  Sperm whales produce only one calf every five years.  Their slow rate of maturity and their low birth rate make them particularly vulnerable to things like oil spills - or commercial whaling, which nearly wiped out the entire species before the moratorium took effect in 1986.
 
Sperm whales are one of the most remarkable creatures with whom we share our planet, longer than a school bus and as heavy as three African elephants.  Unlike humpbacks, bowheads, and other baleen whales that use leathery strips to filter krill and plankton, sperm whales have dozens of large conical teeth.  Famously, sperm whales have been known to dive down to depths of greater than a mile in pursuit of giant squid, a favorite food.  (Allow me to take off my scientist hat for a moment to say this: anything that can dive to the bottom of the ocean to fight giant squid in the DARK is pretty badass!)
 
But even sperm whales may turn out to be no match for the nightmare Tony has wrought in the Gulf of Mexico.  Despite what President Obama and Tony assure us, they will not be able to recover very much of the oil.  They will not be able to make the Gulf better than new.  Islands will disappear, toxic oil and dispersants will enter the food chain, coastal businesses will go bankrupt, and species may be lost. 
 
All of this points to two urgent truths:
 
1. We must keep the pressure on BP and the government to do all that is humanly possible to mitigate the impacts of this disaster, and give sperm whales and other species a fighting chance.
 
2. We have to learn from this.  Rhetoric and theater are no substitute for action.  I don't want to hear another politician tell me anything about energy independence, green jobs, or clean, renewable technology.  SHOW ME SOMETHING.  Ban offshore drilling.  Improve the safety of existing rigs, at the same time we begin to phase them out completely.  Increase fuel efficiency of cars.  Cap greenhouse pollution. 
 
Or retire from business and politics, and let new leaders take over.  Leaders that work for all of us, including the sperm whales, and not for Tony and the other Big Oil CEOs.
 
For the oceans,
 
John H

As the hermit crabs go, so goes the Gulf

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jhocevar

Greetings from Grand Isle, Louisiana, one of the growing number of places unlucky enough to win a "heavily oiled" classification on the government maps tracking the disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. Despite BP's efforts to keep it under wraps, we're here to document the impacts of the spill. The public has a right - and a responsibility - to know the true cost of our continued reliance on offshore oil, and fossil fuels in general.

Yesterday we saw part of the evidence of that cost. Walking through Grand Isle State Park, we came across a tidal flat that was littered with tens of thousands of dead hermit crabs. It was a depressing scene, and took me all the way back to my first visit to the beach, over 35 years ago, when discovering hermit crabs at Rocky Neck State Park in Connecticut helped inspire a life-long love of the ocean.



Now, I realize it can seem a little odd to wax poetically about hermit crabs when we're talking about the biggest environmental disaster in North American history. As John Stewart pointed out on the Daily Show, entire communities along the Gulf Coast are reeling right now, and many species - sea birds, turtles, and even a population of sperm whales - are being pushed to the brink of extinction. Why should anyone care about a few hermit crabs?

The problem is that it's all connected. Hermit crabs may not be quite as cute as sea turtles or as strikingly beautiful as roseate spoonbills, but they are a bellwether for the health of the Gulf of Mexico. Hermit crabs stay largely out of site, eking out a living in sandy and marshy sand and mud. When the sediment fills up with oil, so do the shells of the hermit crabs, and they suffocate. So if all the hermit crabs on a beach die, it's pretty safe to say that the entire top layer of sand is full of oil - and no longer able to sustain life other than bacteria.

roseate spoonbill

And it doesn't stop there, because hermit crabs are an important part of marine food webs, particularly in the Gulf of Mexico. Shore birds like spoonbills, egrets, and herons feed heavily on hermit crabs, and so do nurse sharks, flounders, and many other types of fish. Whether they feed on oiled hermit crabs and are poisoned by the toxic mix of oil and chemical dispersants or go hungry because large portions of their food supply have succumbed to this disaster, the impacts of the hermit crab die off we saw last night don't end with the hermit crabs.

The true cost of oil doesn't end at the gaspump.

For the oceans,
John Hocevar

 

About Me

jhocevar
Washington, DC USA

John Hocevar knew that he wanted to protect the world’s oceans from the first time he saw the beach when he was four years old. Since that time, the marine biologist has worked on a host of ocean conservation issues from protecting the habitat of endangered sea turtles in Florida to teaching marine biology and environmental science to students. John has extensive experience in coral reef conservation, and worked with Coral Cay Conservation to develop a coastal management plan for the Government of Belize. In addition to ocean conversation work, John has spent time organizing students around various environmental and social justice issues. Before coming to Greenpeace in 2004, John was the founder and executive director of Students for a Free Tibet.


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