T features Oil spills, tourists hamper Port Aransas researchers United Press International :PORT ARANSAS Scientists who once studied the Culf of Mexico from an un spoiled, windswept beach now are squishing through oil from of fshore drilling rigs and watch ing condominiums spring up on the dunes. “Development on this island is rampant and unchecked,” complained Anthony Amos, a physical oceanographer at the University of Texas Marine Sci ence Institute. Like the ocean, the institute’s scientists, faculty and students are having to adapt to the en croachment of human beings on shore and off. Their studies have moved from strict biology and chemistry into environmen tal issues, including oil slicks and a seafood supply for the future. Since 1946, the institute’s re search buildings and dormitor ies have been the last outpost of civilization where Mustang Is land meets the sea east of Cor pus Christi. Just five years ago 13 miles of’beach stretched away to the south with nothing but sand dunes and sea oats. But now the sun bounces of f 9 . >r : IE •i<> Ml fill M 'Pi W ).() P" H5 x£ x7 xl ne Jra '•rsr.-.: vr.., ■*. r w- pf W kinko's copies 201 College Main 846>8721 HAPPY Join us for half price on mixed drinks and oysters on the half shell. Only at Pelican’s Wharf every Monday thru Friday 5 — 7 p.m. Enjoy Margaritas by the liter just $7.00. HOUR Mixed Drinks and Oysters ❖ *half price does not include beer, wine, cognac or ice cream drinks liconV 2500 Texas Ave., 693-5113 recreational vehicles parked on the beach, and nearly a dozen condominiums rise from the sand. Port Aransas, once a scruf fy fishing village, has turned into a tourist town. Balls of oil apparently from of f shore rigs have been washing onto the Texas coast the past H) or 15 years. Then in 1979-80, more than 3 million barrels of oil was blown into the ocean f rom the Ixtoc 1 well in the Bay of Campeche, Mexico, and drifted 600 nautical miles northwest to Mustang Island. A yearly change in the ocean currents saved the island from devastation, Amos said. But he is still finding Ixtoc tar reefs — crude oil that has settled to the bottom and mixed with sand — including a 75-foot reef disco vered in January. I’lie tar reefs are “nothing alarming. but interesting,” Amos said. They will eventually break into tarballs, wash ashore and blacken tourists’ feet. When the oil spill excitement passed, the institute continued its research into the delicate ba lances of marine life. One graduate student is studying the effect of changes in temperature and salinity on crabs. Another is researching the food sources provided by sea grasses, said Rick Tinnin, who directs marine education ser- \ ices at the institute. The institute oversees a breeding project for Ridley tur tles, which are being carefully nurtured to replenish the spe cies in the Quit’ of Mexico. The scientists have .also learned how to make red fish spawn “almost on command” by varying light and water temper ature, Tinnin said. The fish could eventually be used as a food source — grown on farms like catfish — except that they cannot reproduce in fresh water. Hundreds of tourists troop through the institute when rain drives them off the beach, and Tinnin escorts more than 5,000 high school students a year through the institute. He shows them the ongoing experiments and gives tours of the institute’s well-equipped research vessels — the 57-foot “Katy” and the 80-foot “Longhorn.” “These are the kids that are going to be making decisions ab out my coastline,” he said. The University of Texas will not become of ficially involved in environmental disputes, so sci entists who oppose planned de velopment — like Amps — must protest as private citizens. Amos is currently combating plans to build a crewboat turn ing basin at a spot that he be lieves could be a bird sanctuary. “There are less and less places where you get these magic days with perfect calm and you get hundreds of roseate spoonbills and reddish egrets. I think it’s an incredible site," he said. Something Special Manor East Mall Bryan, Texas V2 Price Storewide introducing new lines of greeting cards, silk flowers, candles and many other ^ items. Wednesday-Saturday Only! P WHERE WE BELONG C LASS«' 86 SPRING BALL MARCH 4, 9-1 am MSC BALLROOM TICKETS ON SALE IN MSC and Academic Building FEB. 21 - MARCH 4 for $J0 Bull's-eye photo by Jerrold J. 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