Bugs ate 200,000 tonnes of oil spill: Study

Editors' Picks

  • Ferguson criticises City for Mancini sacking

    Ferguson criticises City for Mancini sacking

    Ferguson criticises City for Mancini sacking

    LONDON (Reuters) - Manchester United's outgoing manager Alex Ferguson has criticised neighbours Manchester City for sacking Roberto Mancini. The Italian boss was sacked on Monday having failed to retain the Premier League title he won last season and after losing the FA Cup final to Wigan Athletic. Mancini took out a full-page advertisement in the Manchester Evening News on Saturday, thanking fans for their support during his time in charge. The former Inter Milan manager said in the ad:

  • Ferguson praises 'amazing' Beckham's longevity

    Ferguson praises 'amazing' Beckham's longevity

    Ferguson praises 'amazing' Beckham's longevity

    REUTERS - David Beckham's longevity and his ability to reinvent himself were "absolutely incredible", retiring Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson has said. Beckham and Ferguson, who were synonymously linked with Manchester United until the former England captain moved to Real Madrid, both announced in the past 10 days they would retire from soccer at the end of the current season. ...

  • Arsenal deny Rooney approach, chasing Auxerre's Sanogo

    Arsenal deny Rooney approach, chasing Auxerre's Sanogo

    Arsenal deny Rooney approach, chasing Auxerre's Sanogo

    LONDON (Reuters) - Arsenal have made no approach for Manchester United's Wayne Rooney but are in "advanced talks" with French side Auxerre to sign 20-year-old striker Yaya Sanogo, manager Arsene Wenger said on Friday. "I don't know if Man United will sell Rooney, and that is the best sign to show you that we have not made any approach for him; the first thing is to phone Manchester United, which we did not do," the Frenchman told reporters. ...

  • Retiring Ferguson seeks anything but a quiet life

    Retiring Ferguson seeks anything but a quiet life

    Retiring Ferguson seeks anything but a quiet life

    By Sonia Oxley MANCHESTER, England (Reuters) - When Alex Ferguson wakes up on Monday morning without a Manchester United team to manage he will not be putting his feet up and settling into a quiet retirement. The 71-year-old Scot takes charge of his 1,500th and final United game at West Bromwich Albion on Sunday before stepping down after more than 26 years at Old Trafford. He might have had 10 hours' sleep for the first time ever on Monday night after a huge celebratory open-top bus parade

  • FACTBOX - David Beckham

    FACTBOX - David Beckham

    FACTBOX - David Beckham

    REUTERS - Here is a look at the life and career of former England captain David Beckham who announced his retirement on Thursday. EARLY LIFE - Beckham was born on May 2, 1975 in London. He joined Manchester United as a 16-year-old trainee in 1991. By 1995 he became a regular during the club's most successful era. - They won the Premier League and FA Cup double during his first full season. During the 1996/97 campaign he scored from the halfway line in an opening day victory over Wimbledon. - In

  • David Beckham's statement in full

    David Beckham's statement in full

    David Beckham's statement in full

    LONDON (Reuters) - David Beckham will retire at the end of the season. The most capped England outfield player will be hanging up his boots after a career in which he won 19 trophies. He is the first English player to win league titles in four different countries, with Manchester United (England), Real Madrid (Spain), LA Galaxy (United States) and Paris St Germain (France). Following is his statement in full: "I'm thankful to PSG for giving me the opportunity to continue but I feel now is the

Washington, Sep 12 (IANS) Hydrocarbon-eating bugs in the Gulf of Mexico cleared over a period of five months at least 200,000 tonnes of oil and natural gas that had spewed into the water body from a ruptured 2010 deepwater well, say US researchers.

Researchers from the University of Rochester and Texas A&M University analyzed an extensive data set to determine not only how much oil and gas was eaten by bacteria, but also how the characteristics of this feast changed with time.

"A significant amount of the oil and gas that was released was retained within the ocean water more than one-half mile below the sea surface. It appears that the hydrocarbon-eating bacteria did a good job of removing the majority of the material that was retained in these layers," said co-author John Kessler, an associate professor at the University of Rochester.

The results include the first measurements of how the rate at which the bacteria ate the oil and gas changed as this disaster progressed, information that is fundamental to understanding both this spill and predicting the behaviour of future spills, the journal Environmental Science and Technology reports.

Kessler noted: "Interestingly, the oil and gas consumption rate was correlated with the addition of dispersants at the wellhead. While there is still much to learn about the appropriateness of using dispersants in a natural ecosystem, our results suggest it made the released hydrocarbons more available to the native Gulf of Mexico microorganisms."

Their measurements show that the consumption of the oil and gas by bacteria in the deep gulf had stopped by September 2010, five months after the Deepwater Horizon explosion.

"It is unclear if this indicates that this great feast was over by this time or if the microorganisms were simply taking a break before they start on dessert and coffee" said Kessler, according to a Rochester statement.

"Our results suggest that some (about 40 percent) of the released hydrocarbons that once populated these layers still remained in the Gulf post-September 2010, so food was available for the feast to continue at some later time. But the location of those substances and whether they were biochemically transformed is unknown."

Previous studies of the Deepwater Horizon spill had shown that the oil and gas were trapped in underwater layers, or "plumes", and that the bacteria had begun consuming the oil and gas.

By using a more extensive data set, the researchers were able to measure just how many tonnes of hydrocarbons released from the spill had been removed in the deep gulf waters.

The team's research suggests that the majority of what once composed these large underwater plumes of oil and gas was eaten by the bacteria.

2013-5-15-16-00-00
Confederations Cup Brazil 2013
Confederations Cup Brazil 2013 has started!

Most Popular Stories

  • South African woman caught at Mumbai airport with 26 kg drugs

    IANS

    Mumbai, May 17 (IANS) In one of the biggest seizure of drugs, customs officials at Mumbai Airport Friday nabbed a South African woman carrying 26 kg of drugs worth over Rs.13 crore, an official said here.

  • Chilling out in sizzling Dubai's all-ice cafe

    Chilling out in sizzling Dubai's all-ice cafe

    Reuters
    Chilling out in sizzling Dubai's all-ice cafe

    By Mirna Sleiman DUBAI (Reuters) - Honeymooners and other tourists from the Gulf are heading to the throbbing heart of Dubai to beat the summer heat by cooling off at the first "ice lounge" in the Middle East. The interior decor of Dubai's Chillout cafe is made entirely of carved ice, with frozen picture frames, ice curtains and frosty seats covered in fur. The interior of the cafe, owned by UAE's Sharaf Group, is lit with multi-coloured fluorescent lights. ...

  • Road Test and Review: Ford EcoSport

    Full Throttle

    The Ford EcoSport has been an object of infatuation since it broke cover at the Delhi Auto Expo in 2012. It basked in the limelight for a year and a half for three reasons – an unconventionally attractive design, the … Continue reading →

  • Trio cracks and confesses, BCCI suspends another cricketer

    IANS

    New Delhi, May 17 (IANS) The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) swung into action Friday calling an emergency meeting and suspending a cricketer, but more and more sordid details of the spot fixing scandal came tumbling as the three arrested players, including S. Sreesanth, reportedly confessed to their crime.

  • Manmohan Singh only power centre in UPA Govt.: Digvijay Singh

    ANI

    New Delhi, May 18 (ANI): Congress general secretary Digvijaya Singh has said that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is the only power-centre in the UPA Government and calls all shots.