Newport Beach Personal Trainers of Jungle Fitness Orange County offers Tustin Personal Training in Orange County, Tustin’s #1 OC Personal Trainers are now offering personal training in Costa Mesa via online! Welcome to Talkshow Tuesday, where we’ll discuss the details of the Gulf Coast Oil Spill Relief and how you can help!

Posted by JungleFitness on June 22, 2010 at 10:12 pm.

Hey everyone and welcome to the official JUNGLE FITNESS Orange County Personal Trainer Blog!  Today is Talk-show Tuesday, we’re going to go over the Gulf Coast Oil Spill Relief and how it’s affecting the wild life that live near there.


Irvine Personal Trainer, Jon Jung in Irvine Orange County, #1 Personal Training in Irvine Orange County, Jungle Fitness: Bird covered in Oil


The catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico — already the size of Delaware and growing daily–will likely impact the coastline and Gulf communities from Texas to Florida.

Experts fear that the spill will result in an environmental disaster. It threatens the fragile Gulf coastline and wetlands vital to the region’s economy, the seafood industry, thousands of species of wildlife, and the region that forms the first line of defense to storms and hurricanes. There have been a variety of ongoing efforts to stem the flow of oil at the wellhead. Crews have been working to protect hundreds of miles of beaches, wetlands and estuaries along the northern Gulf coast, using skimmer ships, floating containment booms, anchored barriers, and sand-filled barricades along shorelines.

(quoted from: crowdrise.com)

Tustin Personal Trainer, Jon Jung in Tustin Orange County, #1 Personal Training in Tustin Orange County, Jungle Fitness: Gulf Oil Spill


Oil Spill?

Oil Spill pictures are usually pictures of oiled birds.  Many people are not aware that it is not just birds that get oiled during a spill.  Other marine life such as marine mammals can also suffer from the effects of an oil spill.  Even small spills can severely affect marine wildlife.  Not all oils are the same.  There are many different types of oil and this means that each oil spill is different depending on the type of oil spilled.  Each oil spill will have a different impact on wildlife and the surrounding environment depending on:

-   the type of oil spilled,

-   the location of the spill,

-   the species of wildlife in the area,

-   the timing of breeding cycles and seasonal migrations,

-   and even the weather at sea during the oil spill.

Where…How?

Oil spills can happen anytime and anywhere. Oil spills happen when people make mistakes or are careless and cause an oil tanker to leak oil into the ocean. There are a few more ways an oil spill can occur. Equipment breaking down may cause an oil spill. If the equipment breaks down, the tanker may get stuck on shallow land. When they start to drive the tanker again, they can put a hole in the tanker causing it to leak oil.

Illegal dumpers are people that will dump crude oil into the oceans because they do not want to spend money on decomposing their waste oil. Because they won’t spend money on breaking up the oil (decomposing it) they will dump oil into the oceans, which is illegal.

Natural disasters (like hurricanes) may cause an oil spill, too. If a hurricane was a couple of miles away, the winds from the hurricane could cause the oil tanker to flip over, pouring oil out.


Costa Mesa Personal Trainer, Jon Jung in Costa Mesa Orange County, #1 Personal Training in Costa Mesa Orange County, Jungle Fitness: Ocean Beach Oil Spill

How does Oil affect Wildlife?

Oil affects wildlife by coating their bodies with a thick layer.  Many oils also become stickier over time (this is called weathering) and so adheres to wildlife even more.  Since most oil floats on the surface of the water it can effect many marine animals and sea birds.  Unfortunately, birds and marine mammals will not necessarily avoid an oil spill.  Some marine mammals, such as seals and dolphins, have been seen swimming and feeding in or near an oil spill.  Some fish are attracted to oil because it looks like floating food.  This endangers sea birds, which are attracted to schools of fish and may dive through oil slicks to get to the fish.

Oil that sticks to fur or feathers, usually crude and bunker fuels, can cause many problems.  Some of these problems are:

-   hypothermia in birds by reducing or destroying the insulation and waterproofing properties of their feathers;

- hypothermia in fur seal pups by reducing or destroying the insulation of their woolly fur (called lanugo).  Adult fur seals have blubber and would not suffer from hypothermia if oiled.  Dolphins and whales do not have fur, so oil will not easily stick to them;

- birds become easy prey, as their feathers being matted by oil make them less able to fly away;

- marine mammals such as fur seals become easy prey if oil sticks their flippers to their bodies, making it hard for them to escape predators;

- birds sink or drown because oiled feathers weigh more and their sticky feathers cannot trap enough air between them to keep them buoyant;

- fur seal pups drown if oil sticks their flippers to their bodies

- birds lose body weight as their metabolism tries to combat low body temperature;

- marine mammals lose body weight when they can not feed due to contamination of their environment by oil;

- birds become dehydrated and can starve as they give up or reduce drinking, diving and swimming to look for food;

- inflammation or infection in dugongs and difficulty eating due to oil sticking to the sensory hairs around their mouths;

- disguise of scent that seal pups and mothers rely on to identify each other, leading to rejection, abandonment and starvation of seal pups; and

- damage to the insides of animals and birds bodies, for example by causing ulcers or bleeding in their stomachs if they ingest the oil by accident.


Newport Beach Personal Trainer, Jon Jung in Newport Beach Orange County, #1 Personal Training in Newport Beach Orange County, Jungle Fitness: Exxon Oil Kills Whale


Oil does not have to be sticky to endanger wildlife.  Both sticky oils such as crude oil and bunker fuels, and non-sticky oils such as refined petroleum products can affect different wildlife.  Oils such as refined petroleum products do not last as long in the marine environment as crude or bunker fuel.  They are not likely to stick to a bird or animal, but they are much more poisonous than crude oil or bunker fuel.  While some of the following effects on sea birds, marine mammals and turtles can be caused by crude oil or bunker fuel, they are more commonly caused by refined oil products.

Oil in the environment or oil that is ingested can cause:

- poisoning of wildlife higher up the food chain if they eat large amounts of other organisms that have taken oil into their tissues;

- interference with breeding by making the animal too ill to breed, interfering with breeding behavior such as a bird sitting on their eggs, or by reducing the number of eggs a bird will lay;

- damage to the airways and lungs of marine mammals and turtles, congestion, pneumonia, emphysema and even death by breathing in droplets of oil, or oil fumes or gas;

- damage to a marine mammal’s or turtle’s eyes, which can cause ulcers, conjunctivitis and blindness, making it difficult for them to find food, and sometimes causing starvation;

- irritation or ulceration of skin, mouth or nasal cavities;

- damage to and suppression of a marine mammal’s immune system, sometimes causing secondary bacterial or fungal infections;

- damage to red blood cells;

- organ damage and failure such as a bird or marine mammal’s liver;

- damage to a bird’s adrenal tissue which interferes with a bird’s ability to maintain blood pressure, and concentration of fluid in its body;

- decrease in the thickness of egg shells;

- stress;

- damage to fish eggs, larvae and young fish;

- contamination of beaches where turtles breed causing contamination of eggs, adult turtles or newly hatched turtles;

- damage to estuaries, coral reefs, sea grass and mangrove habitats which are the breeding areas of many fish and crustaceans, interfering with their breeding;

- tainting of fish, crustaceans, mollusks and algae;

- interference with a baleen whale’s feeding system by tar-like oil, as this type of whale feeds by skimming the surface and filtering out the water; and

- poisoning of young through the mother, as a dolphin calf can absorb oil through it’s mothers milk.

Animals covered in oil at the beginning of a spill may be affected differently from animals encountering the oil later.  For example, early on, the oil maybe more poisonous, so the wildlife affected early will take in more of the poison.  The weather conditions can reduce or increase the potential for oil to cause damage to the environment and wildlife.  For example, warm seas and high winds will encourage lighter oils to form gases, and will reduce the amount of oil that stays in the water to affect marine life.

The impact of an oil spill on wildlife is also affected by where spilled oil reaches.  For example, fur seal pups are affected more than adults by oil spills because pups swim in tidal pools and along rocky coasts, whereas the adults swim in open water where it is less likely for oil to linger.  Dugongs als feed on seagrass along the coast and therefore be more affected by oil spills.

Oil is harsh to the environment, wildlife, and to even us.  You wouldn’t want oil on your skin would you? You wouldn’t want to eat or inhale it would you?

(quoted from: amsa.gov.au)


Irvine Personal Trainer, Jon Jung in Tustin Orange County, #1 Personal Training in Costa Mesa Orange County, Jungle Fitness: Glove covered in Oil


I hope reading this would help you understand the lives of wildlife that were affected by this tragic happenstance.

To donate to the Gulf Coast Oil Spill Relief Charity to help out those affected by this spill, click here for credit card (amazon) or here for paypal. Every Donation is Utmost Appreciated! ;)

This Jon Jungle and I’m out…

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