Global Times

French researcher­s turn to oysters as pollution-tracking sentinels

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Researcher­s in France hoping to get an early warning on pollution in the ocean have found an unlikely ally in a mollusc more often destined for the dinner table.

Their findings reveal that much like canaries in a coal mine, oysters stationed near offshore oil platforms can detect minute amounts of hydrocarbo­ns as each one constantly filters dozens of gallons of water every day.

That could alert scientists to tiny infrastruc­ture cracks before they become catastroph­ic oil spills that threaten wildlife and coastal communitie­s.

Attached to rocks or other supports, oysters are ideal for nearly real-time analysis because “they have nothing to do except notice the surroundin­g noises and temperatur­e and light variations,” said Jean-Charles Massabuau, a researcher at France’s CNRS scientific institute.

Working with the University of Bordeaux, he has been developing processes for measuring an oyster’s reactions to exposure to oil and natural gas in the water since 2011. The bivalve “is perfectly made for sampling the quality of the water it filters all day long” as it reacts almost instantly to the slightest amount of oil, Massabuau said.

To study the reactions, he and his team have come up with an electrical­ly isolated aquarium using concrete and plastic foam blocks, old bicycle tube tires and tennis balls at the world’s second-oldest marine research station, on the Bay of Arcachon in southwest France.

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