The Conservation Biology Institute has created data to
describe the Deepwater Horizon oil spill and to begin to
discern the possible damage it could cause to
terrestrial, estuarine, and freshwater
ecosystems should it make landfall. Using
oil
spill trajectories produced by the Ocean Circulation
Group and the Optical
Oceanography Laboratory at the College of Marine
Science, University of South Florida, and protected
areas data catalogued in PAD-US
(CBI Edition) , we provide a preliminary attempt to
identify ecological resources that may be affected by the
spill.
By overlaying these projected trajectories on a standardized grid, we can select areas that may contain oil from the spill, or are likely to contain oil in the future. We then identify protected areas that are likely to be most directly affected by the spill immediately, and in the near future. We list these areas in a Google spreadsheet.
CBI will continue to update these datasets with future spill trajectory projections. Each update will include geospatial data on the spill trajectory, areas of possible landfall, and the affected protected areas. We want these freely available data will be useful to anyone interested in learning more about the oil spill and its ecological effects.
More information is available at the Data
Basin Oil Spill in the Gulf of Mexico page.
We provide advanced conservation science, technology, and planning to empower our partners in solving the world’s critical ecological challenges