Application of chemical herders do not increase acute crude oil toxicity to cold-water marine species

Overview
TitleApplication of chemical herders do not increase acute crude oil toxicity to cold-water marine species
AuthorsHansen BH, Nordtug T, Øverjordet IB, Altin D, Farkas J, Daling PS, Sørheim KR, Faksness LG
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameThe Science of the total environment
VolumeN/A
IssueN/A
Year2022
Page(s)153779
CitationHansen BH, Nordtug T, Øverjordet IB, Altin D, Farkas J, Daling PS, Sørheim KR, Faksness LG. Application of chemical herders do not increase acute crude oil toxicity to cold-water marine species. The Science of the total environment. 2022 Feb 09; 153779.

Abstract

Chemical herders may be used to sequester and thicken surface oil slicks to increase the time window for performing in situ burning of spilled oil on the sea surface. For herder use to be an environmentally safe oil spill response option, information regarding their potential ecotoxicity both alone and in combination with oil is needed. This study aimed at assessing if using herders can cause toxicity to cold-water marine organisms. Our objective was to test the two chemical herders Siltech OP-40 (OP-40) and ThickSlick-6535 (TS-6535) with and without oil for toxicity using sensitive life stages of cold-water marine copepod (Calanus finmarchicus) and fish (Gadus morhua). For herders alone, OP-40 was consistently more toxic than TS-6535. To test herders in combination with oil, low-energy water accommodated fractions (LE-WAFs, without vortex) with Alaskan North Slope crude oils were prepared with and without herders. Dissolution of oil components from surface oil was somewhat delayed following herder application, due to herder-induced reduction in contact area between water and oil. The LE-WAFs were also used for toxicity testing, and we observed no significant differences in toxicity thresholds between treatments to LE-WAFs generated with oil alone and oil treated with herders. The operational herder-to-oil ratio is very low (1:500), and the herders tested in the present work displayed acute toxicity at concentrations well above what would be expected following in situ application. Application of chemical herders to oil slicks is not expected to add significant effects to that of the oil for cold-water marine species exposed to herder-treated oil slicks.

Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
Publication ModelPrint-Electronic
ISSN1879-1026
eISSN1879-1026
Publication Date2022 Feb 09
Journal AbbreviationSci Total Environ
PIIS0048-9697(22)00871-3
Elocation10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.153779
DOI10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.153779
CopyrightCopyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier B.V.
LanguageEnglish
Language Abbreng
Publication TypeJournal Article
Journal CountryNetherlands
Cross References
This publication is also available in the following databases:
DatabaseAccession
PMID: PMID:35150678