How fast can microbes break down oil washed onto gulf beaches?

A new Florida State University study is investigating how quickly the Deepwater Horizon oil carried into Gulf of Mexico beach sands is being degraded by the sands’ natural microbial communities, and whether native oil-eating bacteria that wash ashore with the crude are helping or hindering that process.
What oceanography professors Markus Huettel and Joel E. Kostka learn will enable them to predict when most of the oil in the beaches will be gone. Their findings may also reveal ways to accelerate the oil degradation rate –– and speed matters, because toxic crude components that remain buried on Gulf Coast beaches may seep into the groundwater below.
“This enormous oil spill affects hundreds of miles of beaches in the Gulf of Mexico,” Huettel said. “We can remove the oil from the beach surface, but oil is also carried deeper into the sand, and we need to understand what happens to that oil. Preventing groundwater contamination is crucial not only to Gulf Coast residents but also to coastal management and local economies like fisheries and tourism that depend on water quality.”
“We will also study the effect of the dispersant known as Corexit on oil metabolism by natural microbial communities,” Kostka said. “Through contacts in the field, my laboratory has acquired Corexit and source oil from the MC252 (Deepwater Horizon) well head for use in our experiments.”
