Bioremediation of marine oil spills involves using oil-degrading microorganisms and nutrients to break down toxic hydrocarbons from spills. There are two main approaches: bioaugmentation adds microbes to degrade compounds not broken down by native microbes, while biostimulation supplements nutrients to enhance degradation by existing microbes. Research has shown biostimulation works best by applying nutrients at low tide along the high tide line to maximize contact time affected the oil. Waves and tides influence nutrient movement, requiring consideration for optimal bioremediation effectiveness.