Almeda Rodrigo, Connelly Tara L, Buskey Edward J
Marine Science Institute, University of Texas at Austin, Port Aransas, TX, USA; Centre for Ocean Life, Technical University of Denmark, Charlottenlund, Denmark.
Marine Science Institute, University of Texas at Austin, Port Aransas, TX, USA; Department of Ocean Sciences, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, Canada.
Environ Pollut. 2016 Jan;208(Pt B):645-54. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2015.10.041. Epub 2015 Nov 14.
We investigated and quantified defecation rates of crude oil by 3 species of marine planktonic copepods (Temora turbinata, Acartia tonsa, and Parvocalanus crassirostris) and a natural copepod assemblage after exposure to mechanically or chemically dispersed crude oil. Between 88 and 100% of the analyzed fecal pellets from three species of copepods and a natural copepod assemblage exposed for 48 h to physically or chemically dispersed light crude oil contained crude oil droplets. Crude oil droplets inside fecal pellets were smaller (median diameter: 2.4-3.5 μm) than droplets in the physically and chemically dispersed oil emulsions (median diameter: 6.6 and 8.0 μm, respectively). This suggests that copepods can reject large crude oil droplets or that crude oil droplets are broken into smaller oil droplets before or during ingestion. Depending on the species and experimental treatments, crude oil defecation rates ranged from 5.3 to 245 ng-oil copepod(-1) d(-1), which represent a mean weight-specific defecation rate of 0.026 μg-oil μg-Ccopepod(1) d(-1). Considering a dispersed crude oil concentration commonly found in the water column after oil spills (1 μl L(-1)) and copepod abundances in high productive coastal areas, copepods may defecate ∼ 1.3-2.6 mg-oil m(-3) d(-1), which would represent ∼ 0.15%-0.30% of the total dispersed oil per day. Our results indicate that ingestion and subsequent defecation of crude oil by planktonic copepods has a small influence on the overall mass of oil spills in the short term, but may be quantitatively important in the flux of oil from surface water to sediments and in the transfer of low-solubility, toxic petroleum hydrocarbons into food webs after crude oil spills in the sea.
我们研究并量化了3种海洋浮游桡足类动物(陀螺哲水蚤、强壮箭虫和粗喙小哲水蚤)以及一个自然桡足类动物组合在暴露于机械或化学分散原油后的原油排泄率。在暴露于物理或化学分散轻质原油48小时的3种桡足类动物和一个自然桡足类动物组合所分析的粪便颗粒中,88%至100%含有原油滴。粪便颗粒中的原油滴比物理和化学分散油乳液中的油滴小(中位直径:2.4 - 3.5微米),物理和化学分散油乳液中的油滴中位直径分别为6.6微米和8.0微米。这表明桡足类动物能够排出大的原油滴,或者原油滴在摄入前或摄入过程中被分解成更小的油滴。根据物种和实验处理的不同,原油排泄率在5.3至245纳克油·桡足类动物⁻¹·天⁻¹之间,这代表平均重量比排泄率为0.026微克油·微克碳⁻¹·桡足类动物⁻¹·天⁻¹。考虑到溢油后水柱中常见的分散原油浓度(1微升·升⁻¹)以及高产沿海地区的桡足类动物丰度,桡足类动物每天可能排泄约1.3 - 2.6毫克油·立方米⁻³,这相当于每天总分散油的约0.15% - 0.30%。我们的结果表明,浮游桡足类动物摄入并随后排泄原油在短期内对溢油的总体质量影响较小,但在原油从地表水向沉积物的通量以及原油泄漏入海后低溶解度有毒石油烃向食物网的转移方面,可能在数量上具有重要意义。