Cousteau and other experts where stunned to find an island they planned on collecting soil sediments from was littered by many dead birds that they say were clearly poisoned by the BP Gulf Oil Spill Disaster.Dead Bird Island – Terrebonne Parish, Paul Orr, Lower Mississippi Riverkeeper , August 23, 2010:
On Thursday, August 19, 2010 LEAN/LMRKwent on a sampling trip into Terrebonne Bay… accompanied by Alexandra Cousteau, granddaughter of Jacques Cousteau…
What we encountered [Modoto Island] stunned us all. The ground was littered with… [s]o many dead birds that we aren’t sure how many were out there, many dozens of dead birds just in the small area which we surveyed on the island… [in] various states of decay, from scattered bones to a tern that couldn’t have been dead for more than a day and everything in between, that this is an ongoing situation.
We also saw a juvenile gull that was in distress. It could hardly walk and was very unsteady… By the time we finished our sampling and were ready to leave the island the bird had died. …
It is clear to me that these birds are somehow being poisoned by the BP event.
I'm curious why they didn't collect the gull and have a necropsy performed on it. Even a blood sample would have been very useful is establishing cause of death. May not have been poisoning but starvation, which also could be used in the case against BP.
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I'm curious why they didn't collect the gull and have a necropsy performed on it. Even a blood sample would have been very useful is establishing cause of death. May not have been poisoning but starvation, which also could be used in the case against BP.