Dolphins and sharks are showing up in surprisingly shallow water just off the Florida coast. Mullets, crabs1, rays and small fish congregate2 by the thousands off an Alabama pier3. Birds covered in oil are crawling deep into marshes4, never to be seen again.
海豚和鲨鱼竟出现在美国佛罗里达州海域的浅水区;鲻鱼、螃蟹、鳐鱼和其它一些小鱼成群聚集在阿拉巴马州的一个码头外;浑身沾满油污的海鸟跌入沼泽,再也没有露出头来。
Marine5 scientists studying the effects of the BP disaster are seeing some strange phenomena6.
Fish and other wildlife seem to be fleeing the oil out in the Gulf7 and clustering(成群) in cleaner waters along the coast in a trend that some researchers see as a potentially troubling sign.
The animals' presence close to shore means their usual habitat(栖息地,产地) is badly polluted, and the crowding could result in mass die-offs as fish run out of oxygen. Also, the animals could easily get devoured8(毁灭,吞食) by predators9.
"A parallel would be: Why are the wildlife running to the edge of a forest on fire? There will be a lot of fish, sharks, turtles trying to get out of this water they detect is not suitable," said Larry Crowder, a Duke University marine biologist.
The nearly two-month-old oil spill has created an environmental catastrophe10 unparalleled(无比的,无双的) in US history as tens of millions of gallons of have spewed(呕吐,喷涌) into the Gulf of Mexico ecosystem11. Scientists are seeing some unusual things as they try to understand the effects on thousands of species of marine life.
For nearly four hours Monday, a three-person crew with Greenpeace cruised past delicate islands and mangrove-dotted inlets(入口,水湾) in Barataria Bay off southern Louisiana. They saw dolphins by the dozen frolicking in the oily sheen and oil-tinged pelicans12(塘鹅) feeding their young. But they spotted13 no dead animals.
"I think part of the reason why we're not seeing more yet is that the impacts of this crisis are really just beginning," Greenpeace marine biologist John Hocevar said.
The counting of dead wildlife in the Gulf is more than an academic exercise; the deaths will help determine how much BP pays in damages.
As for the fish, researchers are still trying to determine where exactly they are migrating to understand the full scope of the disaster, and no scientific consensus14(一致,舆论) has emerged about the trend.