Fuller Chris, Bonner James, Page Cheryl, Ernest Andrew, McDonald Thomas, McDonald Susanne
Conrad Blucher Institute, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi, Corpus Christi, Texas 78412, USA.
Environ Toxicol Chem. 2004 Dec;23(12):2941-9. doi: 10.1897/03-548.1.
Dispersants are a preapproved chemical response agent for oil spills off portions of the U.S. coastline, including the Texas-Louisiana coast. However, questions persist regarding potential environmental risks of dispersant applications in nearshore regions (within three nautical miles of the shoreline) that support dense populations of marine organisms and are prone to spills resulting from human activities. To address these questions, a study was conducted to evaluate the relative toxicity of test media prepared with dispersant, weathered crude oil, and weathered crude oil plus dispersant. Two fish species, Cyprinodon variegatus and Menidia beryllina, and one shrimp species, Americamysis bahia (formerly Mysidopsis bahia), were used to evaluate the relative toxicity of the different media under declining and continuous exposure regimes. Microbial toxicity was evaluated using the luminescent bacteria Vibrio fisheri. The data suggested that oil media prepared with a chemical dispersant was equal to or less toxic than the oil-only test medium. Data also indicated that continuous exposures to the test media were generally more toxic than declining exposures. The toxicity of unweathered crude oil with and without dispersant was also evaluated using Menidia beryllina under declining exposure conditions. Unweathered oil-only media were dominated by soluble hydrocarbon fractions and found to be more toxic than weathered oil-only media in which colloidal oil fractions dominated. Total concentrations of petroleum hydrocarbons in oil-plus-dispersant media prepared with weathered and unweathered crude oil were both dominated by colloidal oil and showed no significant difference in toxicity. Analysis of the toxicity data suggests that the observed toxicity was a function of the soluble crude oil components and not the colloidal oil.
分散剂是一种预先获批用于美国部分海岸线(包括得克萨斯州 - 路易斯安那州海岸)溢油事故的化学应对剂。然而,对于在近岸区域(海岸线三海里范围内)使用分散剂的潜在环境风险仍存在疑问,这些区域有密集的海洋生物种群,且容易发生由人类活动导致的溢油事故。为了解决这些问题,开展了一项研究,以评估用分散剂、风化原油以及风化原油加分散剂配制的测试介质的相对毒性。使用了两种鱼类,即杂色食蚊鱼和贝氏虹银汉鱼,以及一种虾类,即海湾美虾(原称海湾糠虾),来评估不同介质在递减暴露和持续暴露条件下的相对毒性。使用费氏弧菌这种发光细菌来评估微生物毒性。数据表明,用化学分散剂配制的油介质的毒性等于或低于仅含油的测试介质。数据还表明,持续暴露于测试介质通常比递减暴露毒性更大。在递减暴露条件下,还使用贝氏虹银汉鱼评估了添加和未添加分散剂的未风化原油的毒性。仅含未风化油的介质以可溶性烃类组分占主导,且发现其比以胶体油组分占主导的仅含风化油的介质毒性更大。用风化和未风化原油配制的油加分散剂介质中总石油烃浓度均以胶体油为主,且毒性无显著差异。对毒性数据的分析表明,观察到的毒性是可溶性原油成分的函数,而非胶体油的函数。