Debate has been raging over government claims that only a quarter of the oil spilled into the Gulf of Mexico by BP remains, but some scientists say naturally occurring bacteria have been eating away at the oil at such a rapid pace that much of it is already gone. The Times-Picayune reports that a microbial ecologist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory has had a team of researchers out in the gulf since May 25 collecting water samples. The team found a significant drop-off in the amount of oil ever since the flow was stemmed in mid-July, and now they can’t find any oil in the ocean (of course much of it has washed ashore, as well.) Conditions have been “absolutely optimal” for the degradation of oil, said Terry Hazen, head of the Ecology Department and Center for Environmental Biotechnology at the Berkeley Lab’s Earth Sciences Division, in an article published yesterday in Science Express . The type of light crude coming out of the well has a large volatile component that degrades easily, the oil particles are small, the concentrations of oil are low and the water where the plume was located is cold. Hazen adds that ”the bugs in this area have become adapted to using oil as a carbon source” because of regular natural oil spills leaks into the water over the years. Early on in their research, Hazen’s team found higher concentrations of oil-eating bacteria than expected and even uncovered a whole new petroleum-eating microbe at the head of the pack. Hazen’s study also discovered that as the microbes do their work, they don’t appear to use much oxygen. On Aug. 4, a
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Microbes Take Bite Out of Gulf Oil Spill