impact of dispersant plus crude oil on natural plankton assemblages in short-term marine mesocosms

Title
impact of dispersant plus crude oil on natural plankton assemblages in short-term marine mesocosms
Author(s)
정승원; 김영옥; 강정훈; 김문구; 심원준
KIOST Author(s)
Jung, Seung Won(정승원)Kim, Young Ok(김영옥)Kang, Jung Hoon(강정훈)Kim, Moon Koo(김문구)Shim, Won Joon(심원준)
Alternative Author(s)
정승원; 김영옥; 강정훈; 김문구; 심원준
Publication Year
2012-10-19
Abstract
To assess the effects of crude oil and dispersant on marine planktonic ecosystems, analyses were performed in 1,000-L mesocosm over a period of nine days. Triplicate experiments were conducted for two different treatments, namely, addition of crude oil alone and oil plus dispersant. In the mesocosm with oil plus dispersant, high concentrations of total petroleum hydrocarbon (TPH) were soon found in the bottom layer. In addition, most planktonic communities responded drastically to the presence of dispersant acting to disperse TPH: total bacterial abundances increased for the first two days and then decreased rapidly for the remainder of the experiment. The abundance of heterotrophic flagellates increased rapidly in association with the increase in bacterial cells. The abundance of phytoplankton and zooplankton communities decreased clearly within two days. Time-delayed relationship also revealed that the TPH concentration had a significant negative relationship with phyto- and zooplankton communities within two days. However, most planktonic communities were affected less adversely in the mesocosms treated with crude oil alone than in those treated with both crude oil and dispersant. The present results demonstrate that the planktonic ecosystem was damaged more severely by the introduction of dispersant than by the harmful effects of crude oil itself. Therefore, caution should be taken wheion of crude oil alone and oil plus dispersant. In the mesocosm with oil plus dispersant, high concentrations of total petroleum hydrocarbon (TPH) were soon found in the bottom layer. In addition, most planktonic communities responded drastically to the presence of dispersant acting to disperse TPH: total bacterial abundances increased for the first two days and then decreased rapidly for the remainder of the experiment. The abundance of heterotrophic flagellates increased rapidly in association with the increase in bacterial cells. The abund
URI
https://sciwatch.kiost.ac.kr/handle/2020.kiost/27512
Bibliographic Citation
PICES 2012, pp.198, 2012
Publisher
PICES
Type
Conference
Language
English
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