lundi 28 juillet 2014

RECRUDESCENCE DE LA MALADIE VIBRIO DANS LE GOLFE DU MEXIQUE


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SOURCE ET SUITE

C' EST UN DOSSIER TRES COMPLET SUR LES SUITES DE LA MAREE NOIRE DE 2010 DANS LE GOLFE DU MEXIQUE.
LA BACTERIE MANGEUSE DE CHAIR  ET LA MALADIE VIBRIO PARTICULIEREMENT ACTIVE CETTE SAISON...

 COMME POUR  LA VACHE FOLLE, CES HECATOMBES D' ANIMAUX MORTS, CES PELICANS ET AUTRES CETACES  N ' AURAIENT JAMAIS DU SE PRODUIRE..ET CES MORTS QUE L' ON NOUS CACHE RESTENT SILENCIEUX JUSQU' A QUAND????

L' HUMAIN SE PREND POUR UN MAGICIEN, MALHEUREUSEMENT IL NE  SAIT PLUS RIEN PREVOIR DES RETOMBEES DE SES INVENTIONS

BIENTOT LE NOUVEAU DOSSIER CHAUD SERA LE GAZ DE SCHISTE.. A SUIVRE



There have been several significant developments over the past few decades in the Gulf of Mexico (GOM) which now require special and immediate attention.  The multitude of oil spills — both large and small — require extraordinary remediation measures, as well as the application of safe and proven technologies which will not make the existing hydrocarbon pollution worse. There are other major sources of water pollution in the GOM which have also became apparent, particularly since the eye-opening 2010 BP oil spill...

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The spate of articles over the past few years regarding the flesh-eating bacteria incidents coming out of the GOM clearly indicate an evolving predicament which no one in government — federal, state, or local — or from industry, want to address in any meaningful way.  When people are regularly getting sick — VERY SICK — to the point of dying from Vibrio vulnificus infections, it does not reflect well on the various branches of government which are responsible for ensuring public safety and addressing serious public health concerns.
Flesh-eating Vibrio bacteria at seasonal peak in South Mississippi waters
Likewise, the many businesses and industries which rely on the GOM are no longer inclined to trumpet serious health alerts, such as the rising incidence of Vibrio infections. Simply put, it’s bad for business.  Whether you’re a fisherman or boat manufacturer,  hotel owner or tour boat operator, a sick Gulf of Mexico does not look good on the front pages of the newspapers.  This is especially true in the middle of the intractable recession that the Southeast economy has been stuck in since 2008.
The same is true for the homeowners and commercial property developers, particularly the wealthy, whose mansions dot the coastline from the Florida Keys to the southeastern coastline of Texas.  They simply don’t want to hear that there are tar balls washing up on their secluded beaches, especially when those tar balls contain high numbers of Vibrio vulnificus.  Or, that red tide is showing up off their coasts.  Schools of dead fish, or dead dolphins, or dead whales washing up on their sandy shores are also an extremely undesirable image.

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