Monday 28 February 2011

Exxon Valdez oil spill: impacts and recovery in the soft-bottom benthic community in and adjacent to eelgrass beds


Titre du document / Document title

Exxon Valdez oil spill : impacts and recovery in the soft-bottom benthic community in and adjacent to eelgrass beds

Auteur(s) / Author(s)

JEWETT S. C. (1) ; DEAN T. A. (2) ; SMITH R. O. (2) ; BLANCHARD A. (1) ;

Affiliation(s) du ou des auteurs / Author(s) Affiliation(s)

(1) Institute of Marine Science, School of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, Alaska 99775, ETATS-UNIS
(2) Coastal Resources Associates, Inc., 1185 Park Center Drive, Suite A, Vista, California 92083, ETATS-UNIS

Résumé / Abstract

We assessed impacts of the 'Exxon Valdez' oil spill on benthic communities within and adjacent to eelgrass beds in Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA. The concentration of total polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons (TPAHs),' benthic community composition, diversity, biomass, and abundance were compared between matched pairs of oiled and reference sites in 1990 (approx. 16 mo after the spill), and in 1991, 1993, and 1995. TPAHs in sediments were high (up to 15 300 ng g-1) at sites adjacent to oiled shorelines in 1990, but declined sharply thereafter. Some reference sites in 1990-91 also had elevated TPAHs in sediments and signatures matching Exxon Valdez oil, but concentrations were significantly lower than at oiled sites. Based on classification and ordination analyses, communities of infauna and small epifauna at some oiled sites in 1990 differed from communities at reference sites, and from the same sites in subsequent years. Percent sand and mud and concentration of total chrysenes (PAH analytes indicative of crude oil) explained significant proportions of the temporal and spatial variation in benthic community structure. Total abundance and biomass of epifauna were generally higher at oiled sites, primarily because of higher densities of epifaunal bivalves. Otherwise, there were few consistent community-wide responses to oiling in diversity, richness, total abundance, total biomass, or the abundances of major taxonomic groups (e.g. polychaetes or bivalves). We attribute the lack of a stronger community-wide response to the varying sensitivities of constituent taxa to oil and organic enrichment. Over half of the dominant families differed with respect to abundance at oiled versus reference sites. Most, including 9 families of polychaetes, were more abundant at oiled sites. Most of these were stress-tolerant or opportunistic, and their increase was likely due to organic enrichment. Negative impacts were most evident in oil-sensitive amphipods, especially the families Isaeidae and Phoxocephalidae. There were consistently more of these amphipods at reference sites, and abundances at oiled sites were likely reduced as a result of oil toxicity. Most of these differences between oiled and reference sites persisted through 1995, 6 yr after the spill. We suspect that these differences are a result of the spill, but we rely on post-spill comparisons to infer impacts, and our conclusions rely on the untestable assumption of equality between oiled and reference sites in the absence of a spill. Future assessments of the impacts of oil spills or other accidental environmental disturbances could benefit from pre-impact studies that provide objective criteria for selection of matched pairs of sites, thereby supporting the assumption of equality in the absence of the disturbance.