Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Circuito Exterior, Ciudad Universitaria, Coyoacan, C.P. 04510 Ciudad de México, Mexico; Ocean and Earth Science, National Oceanography Centre (Southampton), University of Southampton, Southampton SO14 3ZH, United Kingdom.
Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Circuito Exterior, Ciudad Universitaria, Coyoacan, C.P. 04510 Ciudad de México, Mexico.
Sci Total Environ. 2018 May 1;622-623:325-336. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.11.228. Epub 2017 Dec 13.
The Gulf of Mexico is considered one of the world's major marine ecosystems, supporting important fisheries and habitats such as barrier islands, mangrove forests, seagrass beds, coral reefs etc. It also hosts a range of complex offshore petroleum exploration, extraction, and refining industries, which may have chronic or acute impacts on ecosystem functioning. Previous work on the marine effects of this activity is geographically incomplete, and has tended to focus on direct hydrocarbon impacts, while impacts from other related contaminants (e.g. heavy metals, salt-rich drilling muds) which may be discharged from oil facilities have not been widely assessed. Here, we examine historical trace element accumulation in marine sediments collected from four sites in the Tamaulipas shelf, Gulf of Mexico, in the area of the Arenque oil field. Dated sediment cores were used to examine the sources, and historical and contemporary inputs, of trace metals (including those typically present in oil industry discharges) and their potential biological impact in the Tamaulipas aquatic environment over the last 100years. CaO (i.e. biogenic component) normalized data showed increasing V, Cr, Zn, Cu, Pb, Zr and Ba towards the sediment surface in three of the four cores, with Ba and V (based on an adverse effect index) possibly associated with adverse effects on organisms. Dated Ba/CaO profiles show an increase of 30-137% after opening of oil installations in the study area, and can be broadly correlated with increasing oil industry activities across the wider Gulf of Mexico. Data do not record however a clear enhancement of Ba concentration in sediment cores collected near to oil platforms over more distal cores, indicating that any Ba released from drilling platforms is incorporated quickly into the sediments around the drilling sites, and once this element has been deposited its rate of resuspension and mobility is low.
Sediment core data from the Tamaulipas shelf show the influence of oil industry activities on selected trace element concentrations, with Ba/CaO broadly correlating with increasing oil industry activities across the wider Gulf of Mexico.
墨西哥湾被认为是世界上主要的海洋生态系统之一,支持着重要的渔业和栖息地,如堤岛、红树林、海草床、珊瑚礁等。它还拥有一系列复杂的近海石油勘探、开采和精炼工业,这些工业可能对生态系统功能产生慢性或急性影响。以前关于该活动对海洋影响的研究在地理上并不完整,而且往往侧重于直接烃类影响,而来自其他相关污染物(如重金属、含盐量高的钻井泥浆)的影响,这些污染物可能从石油设施中排放出来,尚未得到广泛评估。在这里,我们研究了从墨西哥湾塔毛利帕斯架上的四个地点采集的海洋沉积物中的历史微量元素积累。使用定年的沉积物岩芯来研究过去 100 年来,在塔毛利帕斯水域环境中,痕量金属(包括通常存在于石油工业排放物中的那些金属)的来源、历史和当代输入及其潜在的生物影响。在用 CaO(即生物成分)归一化数据后,在四个岩芯中的三个岩芯中,V、Cr、Zn、Cu、Pb、Zr 和 Ba 朝着沉积物表面逐渐增加,其中 Ba 和 V(基于不利影响指数)可能与对生物的不利影响有关。基于 Ba/CaO 剖面的年代记录显示,在研究区域的石油设施开放后,增加了 30-137%,并且可以与更广泛的墨西哥湾石油工业活动的增加大致相关。然而,数据并没有记录在离石油平台更近的沉积物岩芯中,Ba 浓度的明显增强,这表明从钻井平台释放的任何 Ba 都很快被纳入钻井点周围的沉积物中,一旦这种元素被沉积下来,其再悬浮和迁移的速度就很低。
来自塔毛利帕斯架的沉积物岩芯数据显示了石油工业活动对选定微量元素浓度的影响,Ba/CaO 与更广泛的墨西哥湾石油工业活动的增加大致相关。