Two thirds of the whiting caught by the Press-Register on Dauphin Island, 9 January 2011, had lesions on their bodies. The fish live in the turbulent surf zone, where much of BP's oil ended up. Scientists said there might be a connection between the spill and the appearance of the lesions, but cautioned that other factors may be at play. The large fish in the background weighed 12 pounds. The smaller fish in the foreground were about 12 inches long. Ben Raines / Press-RegisterBy Ben Raines, Press-Register
11 January 2012

DAUPHIN ISLAND, Alabama – More than half the fish caught Monday by Press-Register reporters in the surf off Dauphin Island had bloody red lesions on their bodies. Fishing along an uninhabited portion of the barrier island during a trip to survey beaches for tarballs, the newspaper caught 21 fish, 14 of them with lesions. Of those fish, eight had lesions a quarter of an inch across or smaller, while 6 had much larger blemishes. Most of the fish were whiting, a small species common to the surf zone throughout the Gulf of Mexico. Whiting grow to about 2 pounds and are ubiquitous in the surf year round, commonly found inside the first sand bar near breaking waves. A 12-pound black drum also exhibited lesions. Scientists contacted by the newspaper noted that whiting spend their lives close to shore in the area most affected by the Gulf oil spill. Buried mats of oil persist in the surf zone along the Mississippi and Alabama coasts and tarballs remain common on the beach. BP crews working at the water’s edge on Mississippi’s Petit Bois Island — adjacent to Dauphin Island — collect about 250 pounds of tarballs per day, company officials said Tuesday. But, the scientists cautioned, many factors could be to blame, and disease has always been a part of the Gulf ecosystem. “Certainly there is reason to be concerned about these kind of results. Understanding what it means will require a more carefully designed scientific investigation,” said John Valentine, head of the Dauphin Island Sea Lab, after examining photographs of the newspaper’s catch. “You’d want to know how widespread this is. There’s plenty of reason to be concerned if it turns out to be a widespread phenomenon, and if it spreads across multiple species.” Both the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the National Marine Fisheries Service have been researching possible connections between disease seen in offshore species and the Gulf oil spill. In response to questions, the agencies referred the newspaper to Steve Murawski, a University of South Florida researcher. Murawski found that about 3 percent of Gulf fish were afflicted with some type of lesion during sampling conducted for the government after the spill. He said the lesions seen on the whiting “don’t look like the standard skin ulcers we’ve seen associated with the Deepwater Horizon.” “When you get high frequency of fish disease in a location, sure it’s a cause for concern. But without any chemistry we can’t connect it to Deepwater Horizon,” Murawski said. “It looks like there is some kind of pathogen, a bacteria or parasite.” He asked the newspaper for samples of affected fish, as did Will Patterson with the Dauphin Island Sea Lab. The livers and bile of the fish will be analyzed for the presence of oil-related compounds, both said. Jim Cowan — a Louisiana State University scientist also investigating the presence of disease in the red snapper population since the spill — said his work suggests sick fish are more common in locations that received oil during the spill. Tarballs were visible in the surf in the area where the Press-Register caught the diseased whiting. […] The lesions are similar in appearance to wounds seen on fish in Mobile Bay four years ago during a widespread disease outbreak. In that case, scientists blamed a bacteria called Pfiesteria, and said fish were left vulnerable to infection due to a large influx of freshwater that carried industrial pollutants, pesticides and fertilizers. […]

Dauphin Island fish show up with lesions, BP spill link questioned