Our Mission

The mission of Lower Mississippi RIVERKEEPER® is to protect, preserve and restore the ecological integrity of the Mississippi River Basin for current users and future generations through advocacy and citizen action.

Lower Mississippi RIVERKEEPER

Protecting the Lower Mississippi River in Louisiana

 

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Lower Mississippi Riverkeeper with Patrol Boat - Julia

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Latest news on the Oil Disaster in the Gulf
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BP's Deep Water Drilling Disaster
Seafood Sampling for BP Spill Contaminants - East Bay and Beyond
Thursday, 18 November 2010 00:00

The LMRK crew, and Deputy Director of Waterkeeper Alliance Marc Yaggi, traveled from Venice, LA down the MS River through South Pass, East Bay, and Southwest Pass. LMRK continues tissue sampling to better understand the state of the health of the organisms, especially those typically fished and consumed in the Mississippi river basin post oil spill disaster. Our trip today included passing through what can only be considered and oil and gas graveyard consisting of long neglected wells and infrastructure. Along the way we saw BP Cleanup workers in on a beach in East Bay with birds in direct proximitey to contaminated area (photo below).

Highlights: Caught and returned a virtual ton of mullet, blue crabs and some select shrimp. A bonus was seeing a pair of coyote at sunset.

If you value the work we do, please consider making a donation.


To view the complete collection of spill and sampling photos visit the LMRK Flickr page.
 
Lake Borgne Seafood Sampling Trip
Monday, 08 November 2010 00:00

Louisiana Oysters in Sampling Jar Once again the Lower Mississippi RIVERKEEPER (Paul Orr) and his crew, Operations Coordinator - Michael Orr and Photographer - Jeffrey Dubinsky set out for another day of collecting seafood in the gulf. Today's haul included shrimp, blue crab, menhaden (small fish) and oysters. The samples will be sent off to a certified lab.





Lab results from previous sampling missions:
Dead Bird Island - Testing Results
Independent Testing Continues In Gulf
Evaluation of the Results of Whole Blood Volatile Solvents Testing

 
Breton Sound Sampling Photos
Wednesday, 27 October 2010 12:03


Another day on the waters of coastal Louisiana. A mix of weather from sun to clouds to heavy rain and choppy seas made for along but productive day. With an assortment of seafood that that is found on most every dinner table in Louisiana. We gathered the following items. Blue Crab, Shrimp, Oysters and a Red Fish. These items will be sent off to lab and will be tested for various chemicals found in the BP Crude.
 
Evaluation of the Results of Whole Blood Volatile Solvents Testing
Monday, 25 October 2010 14:03

Report By: Wilma Subra

Samples of blood were collected on August 2, 3, 12 and 18, 2010 from three females, age 44, 46 and 51, and five males, age 30, 46, 48, 51 and 59, who were residents and BP cleanup workers in Alabama and Florida.  The whole blood samples were analyzed for Volatile Solvents by Method 0762, by Metametrix Clinical Laboratory in Pensacola, Florida.

Ethylbenzene and m,p-Xylene

The three females and five males had whole blood levels of Ethylbenzene and m,p-Xylene in excess of the NHANE 95th Percentile values of 0.11 ppb for Ethylbenzene and 0.34 ppb for m,p-Xylene.

The highest Ethylbenzene concentration was in the blood of the 48 year old male, whose value was 4 times the 95th Percentile value.  The second highest concentrations of Ethylbenzene  were almost three times the 95th Percentile and occurred in the 59 year old male, 46 year old female, and 51 year old female.

The m,p-Xylene concentrations were the same in the three females and five males, 4 times the 95th Percentile.

Hexane

The highest concentration of Hexane in the blood occurred in the 46 year old female and 30, 46, 48 and 51 year old males.  The hexane concentrations in the blood were in the 40th Percentile.

2-Methylpentane

The concentrations of 2-Methylpentane were high in the 46 year old female and 30 and 46 year old males.  These values ranged from the 82nd to 93rd Percentile.

3-Methylpentane

The concentrations of 3-Methylpentane were highest in the 30 year old male and 46 year old male.  The 30 year old male value was in the 40th Percentile and the 46 year old male was in the 21st Percentile.

Isooctane

The highest concentration of Isooctane occurred in the 51 year old female and 51 year old male.  The 51 year old female was  in the 50th Percentile while the 51 year old male was in  the 30th Percentile. 

Conclusions

All eight individuals tested had Ethylbenzene and m,p-Xylene in their blood in excess of the NHANES 95th Percentile.

The 48 year old male had the highest concentration of Ethylbenzene and Hexane.  The 30 year old male had the highest concentration of 2-Methylpentane, 3-Methylpentane and Hexane.

Ethylbenzene, m,p-Xylene and Hexane are volatile organic chemicals that are present in the BP Crude Oil.  The blood of all three females and five males had chemicals that are found in the BP Crude Oil.
 
The Weeks Bay Principles for Gulf Recovery
Thursday, 14 October 2010 13:13

Pier in Weeks Bay, Alabama

The Weeks Bay Principles for Gulf Recovery


On October 4-6, 2010, ninety-five people representing forty-six community, local, regional, national and international environmental, social justice, and fishermen’s groups, met at the Beckwith Camp and Conference Center on Weeks Bay, Alabama. The meeting was sponsored by Gulf Restoration Network, Gulf Coast Fund and Save Our Gulf (a coalition of Gulf of Mexico waterkeeper programs working on the BP oil disaster). Together, we drafted the following set of goals and principles that we believe must guide the recovery and restoration of the Gulf of Mexico, our coast and our communities in the wake of the BP drilling disaster.

Save Our Gulf Waterkeepers at Camp Beckwith on Weeks Bay
Save Our Gulf Waterkeepers at Beckwith Camp and Conference Center on Weeks Bay
(l-r) Paul Orr - Lower Mississippi Riverkeeper, Charlotte Wells - Galveston Baykeeper, Chasidy Fisher Hobbs - Emerald Coastkeeper, Tammy Herrington - Mobile Baykeeper, Andy Smith - Apalachicola Riverkeeper, Janelle Robbins - Waterkeeper Alliance, Tracy Kuhns - Louisiana Bayoukeeper, Mike Roberts - Louisiana Bayoukeeper

Our Collective Goal


Six months after the BP oil disaster began, the diverse communities that live, work, and derive benefit from the Gulf call on government to take responsibility to:

  • Make coastal communities whole again;
  • Commit to cleaning up and restoring the Gulf;
  • Hold BP accountable;
  • Ensure local participation in decision-making;
  • Conduct short and long-term monitoring; and
  • Invest in economic opportunities to support locally-driven, sustainable recovery that restores and enhances America’s Gulf coast.

Fundamental Guidelines


In all of our work together we will be guided by the following axioms:

  • Build confidence and trust
  • Be inclusive
  • Act and communicate with full transparency
  • Ground decisions in science

Community Recovery


1. Growing and diverse constituencies of Gulf residents and organizations recognize that the future of their livelihoods depends on Gulf restoration. Seventy-three percent of voters in Gulf coast states support comprehensive coastal restoration*.

2. The people of the Gulf coast whose way of life and livelihood has been most affected by the BP disaster must have a seat at the decision- making table.

3. Recovery and restoration efforts must create tens of thousands of new jobs and provide economic opportunities to local communities, particularly disadvantaged and distressed communities.

4. Recovery must put our communities to work restoring the Gulf and building a healthy economy – leading America into a renewable energy future.

* Lake Research Partners poll, Septembers 2010

Public Health


1. Tens of thousands of response workers, community members and tourists have been exposed to oil and dispersants. There is a lack of health care providers who are trained to identify and treat chemical illnesses. We need the Center for Disease Control and National Insti- tute of Health to provide our local health care departments with the training and resources to provide the needed health care.

2. There are still millions of gallons of oil and dispersants in the environment – while officials tell us that the water and air are fine, people continue to be concerned and report health symptoms. We need federal funding for independent, ongoing and long-term monitoring of our water, soil and air across all affected areas so we can be assured if and when the environment is clean.

3. The Gulf Coast provides 86% of the U.S. shrimp harvest, and 56% of the U.S. oyster harvest* – and we need better evidence that it’s safe. Current monitoring is inadequate and does not test for toxic heavy metals or dispersants. It does not protect our children or our most vulnerable populations. We need the Food and Drug Administration to set monitoring standards that can guarantee the safety of the food we harvest and eat.


Coastal Restoration


1. The BP disaster is only the latest, most visible evidence of environmental destruction that has been ongoing in the Gulf for decades.

2. The government must act now to restore our coastal wetlands. A healthy Gulf is a prosperous Gulf crucial to storm protection, fishing, recreation, seafood and tourism – the cornerstones of the Gulf culture and economy.

3. Eighty percent of the coastal wetlands lost in our country are lost in the Gulf coast*. For example, Louisiana loses a football field of wetlands every 45 minutes**, and 40% to 60% of that is attributed to oil and gas activity***. BP and the oil and gas industry must pay their fair share for coastal restoration.

* Turner, R.E. 1997. Wetland loss in the Northern Gulf of Mexico: Multiple working hypotheses. Estuaries. 20:1-13

** Dahl, T.E. 2006. Status and trends of wetlands in the conterminous United States 1998 to 2004. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. p 54, Table 4.

*** Ko, Jae-Young, Impacts of Oil and Gas Activities on Coastal Wetlands Loss in the Mississippi Delta, Harter Research Institute. Also Penland, Shea, et al., Process Classification of Coastal Land Loss Between 1932 and 1990 in the Mississippi River Delta Plain, Southeastern Louisiana. (1990). U.S. Geological Survey, Open File Report 00-418.

Marine Recovery and Resiliency


1. The first step to recovery of the Gulf marine ecosystem is to identify all sources of past, present and future environmental degradation, including fully understanding the long-term impacts of the BP oil disaster. Specific restoration initiatives, both short and long-term, must be implemented to address all sources of marine injury.

2. Robust monitoring programs that fully disclose process and results, as well as access to impacted areas, are critical for ensuring effective restoration.

3. In order to restore the entire Gulf ecosystem, it is essential that the off-shore environment receive its fair share of attention and funding for recovery. Specific funding sources for this work must be provided immediately.

4. Everything possible must be done to prevent offshore drilling disasters. Reforms in policy, regulations, oversight, and enforcement are urgently needed to prevent more drilling disasters and to guarantee rapid, non-toxic and non-destructive response and cleanup when accidents do occur. Policies must be implemented that transition the Gulf region to a clean, renewable energy economy.

Conclusion


The Weeks Bay Principles for Gulf Recovery present a unified vision that will guide our work towards restored and healthy natural resources in the Gulf of Mexico region that support Gulf communities and wildlife, the region’s unique cultures, and the nation.

Drafting Organizations


Alabama Chapter, Sierra Club
Apalachicola Riverkeeper
Asian Americans for Change - Gulf Coast Angels
Bayou Interfaith Shared Community Organizing (BISCO)
Delta Chapter (Louisiana), Sierra Club
Emerald Coastkeeper
Environment America
Equity and Inclusion Campaign
Galveston Baykeeper
Grand Bayou Community United
Greenpeace
Guardians of the Gulf
Gulf Islands Conservancy
Gulf Restoration Network
Joe Yerkes, Florida Fisherman
Lake Pontchartrain Basin Foundation
Louisiana Association of Family Fishermen
Louisiana Bayoukeeper
Louisiana Environmental Action Network
Louisiana Shrimpers Association
Lower Mississippi Riverkeeper
Mississippi Center for Justice
Mississippi Chapter, Sierra Club
Mobile Baykeeper
National Wildlife Federation
Natural Resources Defense Council
Oceana
Oxfam America
Sassafrass
Sierra Club Environmental Justice and Community Partnership Program
South Bay Communities Alliance
South Walton Community Council
Southwings
Surfrider Foundation
Turkey Creek Community Initiative
Waterkeeper Alliance / Save Our Gulf
 
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Report a Problem

If you spot something fishy on the river call the toll free Lower Mississippi
RIVERKEEPER® hotline:
1-866-msriver (1-866-677-4837)

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