Suffering the negative effects of oil production and none of the nice ones. LOL
Bana massive oil spills kill fish and aquaculture tusibishane nanii
I can tell you the truth for free, oil keeps the sea warm for fish because the sea is very cold. Oil also protects fish skin. Some fish do burry their eggs near oil seeps.
If you look closely at any swamp you will see black fluids or a black film on the surface. Mavitu za black on the reeds. Hio sio mould ama uchafu hio ni oil. And frogs love oil. Kwanza ile matope ya black in English known as
brackish water inakaa matope chafu, that's where most organisms hide including crocodiles. Crocodiles and gators cover themselves in oil found in swamps and they live for very many years. Crocodile skin hunuka mafuta imeoza.
Remember that even your ordinary vaseline is a by product of oil.
People who drink raw oil hawapati magonjwa ya ujinga ujinga. Usikunywe mingi.
Look at people who work in oil industry covered in oil from head to toe, they are usually very healthy. Angalia hata ngozi ya mechanic.
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/article/140325-texas-pollution-oil-spills-animals-science
1. Natural Seeps
Natural seeps of oil underneath the Earth's surface account for 60 percent of the estimated total load in North American waters and 40 percent worldwide, according to the National Academy of Sciences.
These leakages occur when oil—which is lighter than water—escapes into the water column from highly pressurized seafloor rock. (
Read about Gulf of Mexico seeps.)
Off Santa Barbara, California, some 20 to 25 tons of oil flows from seafloor cracks daily—making it one of the world's largest seeps.
Valentine, who studies the Santa Barbara seep, noted that much of the natural oil is consumed by ocean bacteria that have evolved to eat certain oil molecules. (
Read about how nature tackles oil spills.)
But in "places which don't have natural oil seeps and you come along with an oil spill or a sewer pipe that delivers [oil pollution], organisms have not had an opportunity to adapt and are going to respond differently," said
John Farrington, dean emeritus and marine geochemist with Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts.