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oil spill seedingAlmost two weeks after the disaster started, the Deepwater Horizon in the Gulf of Mexico is still gushing up to <b>10,000 barrels</b> of oil into the ocean every day. Efforts by BP and the US government to stop leakage have come up with empty hands, however it turns out one of the keys to cleanup might already exist in the now oil-infested waters. Natural microbes present in every ocean are superb cleaners, and with the addition of a bit of fertilizer they could prove successful in removing oil from the Gulf....<br><br><a href='https://inhabitat.com/fertilizing-naturally-occuring-bacteria-could-help-clean-oil-spill/'>READ ARTICLE</a>1
bioremediation-3Almost two weeks after the disaster started, the Deepwater Horizon in the Gulf of Mexico is still gushing up to <b>10,000 barrels</b> of oil into the ocean every day. Efforts by BP and the US government to stop leakage have come up with empty hands, however it turns out one of the keys to cleanup might already exist in the now oil-infested waters. Natural microbes present in every ocean are superb cleaners, and with the addition of a bit of fertilizer they could prove successful in removing oil from the Gulf....<br><br><a href='https://inhabitat.com/fertilizing-naturally-occuring-bacteria-could-help-clean-oil-spill/'>READ ARTICLE</a>2
bioremediation-2Almost two weeks after the disaster started, the Deepwater Horizon in the Gulf of Mexico is still gushing up to <b>10,000 barrels</b> of oil into the ocean every day. Efforts by BP and the US government to stop leakage have come up with empty hands, however it turns out one of the keys to cleanup might already exist in the now oil-infested waters. Natural microbes present in every ocean are superb cleaners, and with the addition of a bit of fertilizer they could prove successful in removing oil from the Gulf....<br><br><a href='https://inhabitat.com/fertilizing-naturally-occuring-bacteria-could-help-clean-oil-spill/'>READ ARTICLE</a>3



