Report on Biopsy Collections from Specimens collected from the Surrounds of the West Atlas Oil Leak - Sea Snake Specimen

1. The sea snake inhaled and ingested petroleum compounds, as evidenced by very high TPH and PAH levels in the lung & trachea swabs, as well as in the stomach contents. 2. High PAH levels were also found in the muscle of the sea snake, suggesting that this animal has been exposed to petroleum co...

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Main Author: Gagnon, Marthe Monique
Format: Report
Published: Department of Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31561
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author Gagnon, Marthe Monique
author_facet Gagnon, Marthe Monique
author_sort Gagnon, Marthe Monique
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description 1. The sea snake inhaled and ingested petroleum compounds, as evidenced by very high TPH and PAH levels in the lung & trachea swabs, as well as in the stomach contents. 2. High PAH levels were also found in the muscle of the sea snake, suggesting that this animal has been exposed to petroleum compounds for several days. 3. The likely cause of death for the sea snake is exposure to petroleum hydrocarbons. 4. Sea snake skin swabs did not indicate direct dermal contact with petroleum compounds. 5. The yellow substance collected from the lung of the dead sea snake showed no presence of the chemical dispersants Slickgone or Adrox 6120. 6. During the oil spill, surface animals are more at risk of being affected by exposure to petroleum hydrocarbons than are deep sea fish.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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last_indexed 2025-11-14T08:24:08Z
publishDate 2010
publisher Department of Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-315612022-10-27T03:33:19Z Report on Biopsy Collections from Specimens collected from the Surrounds of the West Atlas Oil Leak - Sea Snake Specimen Gagnon, Marthe Monique oil spill Montara well release pollution sea snake contamination 1. The sea snake inhaled and ingested petroleum compounds, as evidenced by very high TPH and PAH levels in the lung & trachea swabs, as well as in the stomach contents. 2. High PAH levels were also found in the muscle of the sea snake, suggesting that this animal has been exposed to petroleum compounds for several days. 3. The likely cause of death for the sea snake is exposure to petroleum hydrocarbons. 4. Sea snake skin swabs did not indicate direct dermal contact with petroleum compounds. 5. The yellow substance collected from the lung of the dead sea snake showed no presence of the chemical dispersants Slickgone or Adrox 6120. 6. During the oil spill, surface animals are more at risk of being affected by exposure to petroleum hydrocarbons than are deep sea fish. 2010 Report http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31561 Department of Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities fulltext
spellingShingle oil spill
Montara well release
pollution
sea snake
contamination
Gagnon, Marthe Monique
Report on Biopsy Collections from Specimens collected from the Surrounds of the West Atlas Oil Leak - Sea Snake Specimen
title Report on Biopsy Collections from Specimens collected from the Surrounds of the West Atlas Oil Leak - Sea Snake Specimen
title_full Report on Biopsy Collections from Specimens collected from the Surrounds of the West Atlas Oil Leak - Sea Snake Specimen
title_fullStr Report on Biopsy Collections from Specimens collected from the Surrounds of the West Atlas Oil Leak - Sea Snake Specimen
title_full_unstemmed Report on Biopsy Collections from Specimens collected from the Surrounds of the West Atlas Oil Leak - Sea Snake Specimen
title_short Report on Biopsy Collections from Specimens collected from the Surrounds of the West Atlas Oil Leak - Sea Snake Specimen
title_sort report on biopsy collections from specimens collected from the surrounds of the west atlas oil leak - sea snake specimen
topic oil spill
Montara well release
pollution
sea snake
contamination
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31561