Abstract
The year 2020 marks the 10th anniversary of the Deepwater Horizon (DWH)
disaster. From April through July 2010, an estimated total of 4.9
million barrels of oil and 250,000 metric tonnes of natural gas were
discharged into the Gulf of Mexico. Not only were eleven lives lost, but
the tragedy also left a lasting impact on the Gulf’s marine and coastal
ecosystems and on the residents who depend on these habitats for their
livelihood. After the oil spill, the Gulf of Mexico’s microbial
communities played a critical role in the cleanup, contributing core
hydrocarbon bioremediation services. Despite its importance, marine
hydrocarbon microbiology is a young field. Prior to the spill relatively
little was known about marine hydrocarbon degraders. Beginning in 2010,
the development and application of genomics and bioinformatics tools
enabled researchers – for the first time - to identify and examine
individual microorganisms within their complex communities in
unprecedented detail. Today, technical advances and new discoveries
reveal a natural capacity of microbes in the Gulf of Mexico to catalyze
bioremediation of petroleum hydrocarbons. This knowledge is critical to
guide mitigation and restoration strategies that build on microbes’
natural bioremediation capabilities without further disturbing sensitive
ecosystems. This report is based on the deliberations of experts who
participated in the joint colloquium of the American Academy of
Microbiology, ASM’s honorific leadership group, the American Geophysical
Union (AGU), and Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative (GoMRI) in April
2019. The report highlights new research tools, methodology, data
resources, collaborations, and models that will advance basic and
applied research to provide data-driven solutions to environmental
challenges. The report is available at www.ASM.
org/microbe_oceansystem.