Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: SATURDAY, March 2, 1991 TAG: 9103020198 SECTION: VIRGINIA PAGE: A-3 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: GREG EDWARDS/ NEW RIVER VALLEY BUREAU DATELINE: BLACKSBURG LENGTH: Medium
Three veterinarians and a zoology professor will help prepare a plan for restoring the ecology of the Persian Gulf and Saudi peninsula. The water and land have been severely degraded by oil spills and the fallout from burning oil wells.
The scientists will not be dealing with the oil cleanup itself, but will identify ecological problems, said team member Donald Cordes, head of the pathology department at the Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine.
"What veterinarians are supposed to be good at is diagnosing a problem and recommending some treatment," he said.
One of the team's first jobs when it arrives will be to assess the extent of the environmental damage to both marine and land-based ecology.
Cordes said his only information at this point comes from the media, which reported as many as 500 oil wells burning in neighboring Kuwait and from 1 million to 11 million barrels of oil spilled in the gulf.
By contrast, the Valdez spill in Alaska involved about 255,000 barrels.
"One of the characteristics of a war zone is chaos, so we've had different reports on the scale of the contamination," Cordes said.
"Whatever the numbers, it is contamination on an enormous scale."
The date of the team's departure will depend upon the Saudi government, which is making the arrangements, Cordes said.
The four expect their fact-finding stay to last from 10 to 14 days, after which they will return to Tech and work on the recovery plan.
Tech's offer of help was conveyed to the Saudis by a West Virginia environmental consultant, Joseph Strauss, who has connections both with the veterinary school and the Saudi government.
The U.S. government, including Sen. John Warner's office, also has been involved in making arrangements for Tech's participation, Cordes said.
Cordes has experience in marine mammal diseases and has consulted with a variety of governments around the world on animal health and disease control.
He has been to the Middle East before, spending three months in an Arab country three years ago.
Other members of the Tech team are:
Arthur Buikema, a professor of zoology in Tech's College of Arts and Sciences. Buikema recently co-wrote a book on the restoration of habitats damaged by oil spills and was keynote speaker at a major scientific meeting on the Exxon Valdez spill in Alaska. He is an expert on biological monitoring and assessment of pesticides, oil products and other hazardous substances.
Dr. Hugo Veit, a veterinary pathologist, who recently has been involved in fresh-water aquaculture and has broad experience in food animal medicine.
Dr. Pierre Lessard, a veterinary epidemiologist, who has worked extensively throughout Africa. Included in his experience is the effect of climate and the environment on animal disease.
Strauss, the team's liaison with the Saudis, is an expert in endangered species and wild-animal capture who has worked closely with the Smithsonian Institution.
The Saudi government will pay for the team's travel and operating expenses. Team members are volunteering their time and knowledge.
"It could be a very valuable experience for us from the scientific point of view," Cordes said.
Dr. Peter Eyre, dean of the veterinary college, wrote the chief of the Saudi wildlife conservation and development agency that Tech's "participation in the effort to protect the future of the gulf is an effort to fulfill our common responsibility to the planet."
by CNB