Founder and president of Papa Bois Conservation Marc de Verteuil is concerned about the slowness of help for the wildlife affected by the oil spill along the south-western peninsula.He made the comment yesterday as he confirmed that despite numerous sightings of wildlife caked in oil, only one bird was reported to have been rescued and treated since the oil spill was first detected at Petrotrin's port in the Gulf of Paria last Tuesday. The blanket of oil has since spread to beaches in La Brea, Granville and Cedros.
In a telephone interview yesterday, de Verteuil, a T&T Guardian columnist, said his last visit to affected areas in Granville, Bonasse and La Brea was on Monday."Clean-up is progressing slowly," he reported."There was a dead fish at Bonasse beach. I saw a bird which was half covered in oil, but still flying and walking. It will die unless it gets help. I saw two dead pelicans in La Brea."He said clean-up crews told him they had definitely seen animals in distress.
"People doing the cleaning up said they saw two oil-slicked caimans at the mangrove by Granville beach."He said there were a lot of people volunteering help, but "we need to work on putting an effective response in place."
Dr Carla Phillips, of the UWI School of Veterinary Medicine and Aquatic Animal Health Unit, said the school was one of three cleaning centres set up to assist wildlife affected by the spills. She said Environmental Management Authority (EMA) officials on Friday informed the school that wildlife might be coming in for treatment."At that point we essentially started putting measures in place to have facilities available to have animals brought in for treatment and care."
However, she said there was no accommodation for the animals at the school, so it will treat and clean the animals and send them to the other two centres for recuperation. The centres are Wildlife Orphanage and Rehabilitation Centre in Petit Valley and the El Socorro Centre for Wildlife Conservation. However, she said so far no animals have been brought in.Lisa Thomas of the Wildlife Orphanage, where the rescued bird has been recuperating, also said no other oil-affected animals had been sent to the centre.
Environment Minister Ganga Singh and Petrotrin corporate communications manager Gillian Friday could not be reached for comment yesterday.