To expand on this point, if you were to drink methanol (wood alcohol),
your body would metabolize it to formaldehyde and then formic acid.
It's the formic acid that would blind or kill you. (This happened a
lot during Prohibition.)

Jane Shevtsov

On Wed, Aug 11, 2010 at 12:22 PM, David M. Lawrence <d...@fuzzo.com> wrote:
> "Metabolize" is not the same as saying their bodies break down the chemicals
> with no negative effects. All is says is their bodies process the chemicals
> -- but the act of processing the chemicals or their breakdown products may
> very well have harmful effects either right away or at some point in the
> future.
>
> I would ask Peterson to explain precisely what he means here.
>
> Dave
>
> On 8/11/2010 1:02 PM, Wendee Holtcamp wrote:
>>
>> When I went on my Great Gulf Coast Road Trip recently, I visited with
>> several biologists at the Gulf Coast Research Lab in Ocean Springs MS and
>> one of them, Mark Peterson, told me that most fish actually metabolize oil
>> (PAH). This abstract says " These experiments confirm that the use of oil
>> dispersants will increase the
>> exposure of ovoviviparous fish to hydrocarbons in oil." Now I'm not a
>> physiologist and so now that I've seen the abstract below, and started to
>> think about it, I'm not quite sure whether that means that they break it
>> down into less toxic substances and it does NOT really impact them
>> negatively, or that their gut is now exposed to this PAH/oil and that could
>> potentially be harmful? Maybe I need to read the paper...
>>
>> Does anyone know? I'll be writing about this soon so I'd love to talk to
>> someone who knows a bit more about it (and yes I can follow up with Mark as
>> well).
>>
>> I also met with Harriet Perry the lady who discovered that virtually ALL
>> the blue crab larvae (zoea) she was collecting daily had a little droplet of
>> oil under their carapace. They get it in there when they molt. So this
>> raises the possibility of it getting into the food chain. So that makes me
>> curious - if fish can metabolize PAH/oil in a way that does not harm them
>> directly (as Mark suggested to me), what about invertebrates like shrimp,
>> squid, crabs etc? Is there any evidence that they can metabolize PAH, and/or
>> that there are any sublethal impacts people should be looking for?
>>
>> Best
>> Wendee
>>
>>
>> Blogs for Nature from the Bering Sea ~ http://tinyurl.com/2ctghbl
>> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>>      Wendee Holtcamp, M.S. Wildlife Ecology ~ @bohemianone
>>     Freelance Writer * Photographer * Bohemian
>>           http://www.wendeeholtcamp.com
>>      http://bohemianadventures.blogspot.com
>> ~~ 6-wk Online Writing Course Starts Sep 4 (signup by Aug 28) ~~
>>  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>> I’m Animal Planet’s news blogger -
>> http://blogs.discovery.com/animal_news
>>
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Ecological Society of America: grants, jobs, news
>> [mailto:ecolo...@listserv.umd.edu] On Behalf Of Geoffrey Patton
>> Sent: Wednesday, August 11, 2010 11:12 AM
>> To: ECOLOG-L@LISTSERV.UMD.EDU
>> Subject: [ECOLOG-L] Good news from the Gulf?
>>
>>
>> In response to Bill's discussion points, I would like to suggest the
>> following paper:
>>
>> Jee Hyun Jung, Un Hyuk Yim, Gi Myeong Han, Won Joon Shim
>> Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, Part C 150 (2009) 218–223
>> Biochemical changes in rockfish, Sebastes schlegeli, exposed to dispersed
>> crude oil
>> Abstract:
>> This paper describes the response of the ovoviviparous rockfish, Sebastes
>> schlegeli, to hydrocarbons in the water-accommodated fraction (WAF) of crude
>> oil, in the presence or absence of oil dispersants. Concentrations
>> of cytochrome P-450 1A (CYP1A) and levels of its catalytic activity
>> ethoxyresorufin O-de-ethylase (EROD) in rockfish exposed to WAF at
>> concentrations of 0.1% and 1% were significantly increased by the addition
>> of a dispersant, Corexit 9500 after 48 h exposure. After 72 h exposure, the
>> levels of CYP1A and EROD activity were significantly increased in 0.1% and
>> 0.01% chemically enhanced WAF (CEWAF) (Corexit 9500 and Hiclean II
>> dispersant). Bile samples from fish exposed toWAF alone had low
>> concentrations of hydrocarbon metabolites, exemplified by 1-hydroxypyrene.
>> After 72 h exposure, hydrocarbon metabolites in bile from fish exposed to
>> WAF in the presence of either Corexit 9500 or Hiclean II were
>> significantly higher compared with fish exposed to WAF alone or control
>> fish. These experiments confirm that the use of oil dispersants will
>> increase the
>> exposure of ovoviviparous fish to hydrocarbons in oil.
>>
>>
>>
>> Cordially yours,
>>
>> Geoff Patton, Ph.D.
>> 2208 Parker Ave., Wheaton, MD 20902      301.221.9536
>>
>> --- On Wed, 8/11/10, William Silvert<cien...@silvert.org>  wrote:
>>
>>
>> From: William Silvert<cien...@silvert.org>
>> Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] Good news from the Gulf?
>> To: ECOLOG-L@LISTSERV.UMD.EDU
>> Date: Wednesday, August 11, 2010, 4:58 AM
>>
>>
>> I confess that I posted this in large part because I was curious to see
>> the reactions. As expected, all replies (on- and off-list) were critical and
>> skeptical. However, although some responses were based on scientific
>> arguments about issues like long-term burial in sediments, many seemed to be
>> based on a deep suspicion of any good news about environmental issues and
>> some relied on conspiracy theories and guilt by association. Curiously no
>> one mentioned that although lighter fractions of oil dissipate more rapidly
>> than heavier tars, they tend to be much more toxic.
>>
>> While I agree that the article paints an incomplete and misleading
>> picture, I am concerned about a broader issue, namely the willingness of the
>> scientific community to investigate the possibility that things may not
>> always be as bad as they seem. For example, some time ago a team of my
>> colleagues investigated the benthic impacts of bentonite (drilling mud)
>> around off-shore rigs. To their great surprise they found that the effects
>> were minor and very localised. I am sure that if they had found something
>> serious they could have published in Science mag, perhaps even with a press
>> conference, but as it was I don't even recall whether the work made it past
>> an internal report.
>>
>> Work on the benthic impacts of fishing has produced some very surprising
>> and counter-intuitive results. One colleague in the UK set out to study the
>> impacts of shellfish dredging, in which massive quantities of sand are
>> sucked up, pushed through a sieve, and dumped back on the ocean floor. Not
>> only could he not see anything worth reporting, but after 24 hours he
>> couldn't even see any evidence of the dredging - the smaller infauna were
>> all present and seemed fine!
>>
>> On the other hand, marks from the otter board of a trawler on the
>> sediments of the Bay of Fundy persist for months in this extremely energetic
>> environment. I was skeptical of this until I participated in some field work
>> in an area where the tides are fast and the tidal range is up to 16 m and it
>> is impossible to moor any kind of enclosure. We did monthly sampling, and
>> when we returned to the site we could see the marks made by our boots the
>> month before. It works both ways.
>>
>> So while I agree in scientific terms with all the criticisms of the
>> article I posted, I am not comfortable with all the attitudes expressed. I
>> think we need to be more open-minded and not prejudge the impacts of events.
>>
>> Bill Silvert
>>
>>
>> ----- Original Message ----- From: "William Silvert"<cien...@silvert.org>
>> To:<ECOLOG-L@LISTSERV.UMD.EDU>
>> Sent: sábado, 7 de Agosto de 2010 11:44
>> Subject: [ECOLOG-L] Good news from the Gulf?
>>
>>
>> The following article from TIME magazine offers an unusually optimistic
>> view of the BP spill which I suspect many will disagree with, but which is
>> worth considering. Bill Silvert
>>
>> Thursday, Jul. 29, 2010
>> The BP Spill: Has the Damage Been Exaggerated?
>> By Michael Grunwald / Port Fourchon, La.
>> President Obama has called the BP oil spill "the worst environmental
>> disaster America has ever faced," and so has just about everyone else. Green
>> groups are sounding alarms about the "catastrophe along the Gulf Coast,"
>> while CBS, Fox and MSNBC are all slapping "Disaster in the Gulf" chyrons on
>> their spill-related news. Even BP fall guy Tony Hayward, after some early
>> happy talk, admitted that the spill was an "environmental catastrophe." The
>> obnoxious anti-environmentalist Rush Limbaugh has been a rare voice arguing
>> that the spill - he calls it "the leak" - is anything less than an
>> ecological calamity, scoffing at the avalanche of end-is-nigh eco-hype...
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
> --
> ------------------------------------------------------
>  David M. Lawrence        | Home:  (804) 559-9786
>  7471 Brook Way Court     | Fax:   (804) 559-9787
>  Mechanicsville, VA 23111 | Email: d...@fuzzo.com
>  USA                      | http:  http://fuzzo.com
> ------------------------------------------------------
>
> "All drains lead to the ocean."  -- Gill, Finding Nemo
>
> "We have met the enemy and he is us."  -- Pogo
>
> "No trespassing
>  4/17 of a haiku"  --  Richard Brautigan
>



-- 
-------------
Jane Shevtsov
Ecology Ph.D. candidate, University of Georgia
co-founder, <www.worldbeyondborders.org>
Check out my blog, <http://perceivingwholes.blogspot.com>Perceiving Wholes

"The whole person must have both the humility to nurture the
Earth and the pride to go to Mars." --Wyn Wachhorst, The Dream
of Spaceflight

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