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Microbial response to crude oil and Corexit 9527: SEAFLUXES enclosure study
Authors:K. Lee  C. S. Wong  W. J. Cretney  F. A. Whitney  T. R. Parsons  C. M. Lalli  J. Wu
Affiliation:(1) Institute of Ocean Sciences, Sidney, B. C., Canada;(2) Departments of Oceanography and Zoology, University of British Columbia, Canada;(3) Third Oceanographic Institute, National Bureau of Oceanography, Xiamen, Fujian, People's Republic of China;(4) Present address: Atlantic Oceanographic Laboratory, Bedford Institute of Oceanography, B2Y 4A2 Dartmouth, N.S., Canada
Abstract:The response of marine bacteria to Corexit 9527, with and without Prudhoe Bay crude oil labeled withn–(1–14C)hexadecane, in a temperate pelagic environment was monitored over 22 days using controlled ecosystem enclosures. The results indicated that Corexit and Corexit-dispersed crude oil stimulated bacterial production by serving as substrates and/or by inducing the release of organic compounds from the indigenous phytoplankton population. Highest bacterial standing stock was observed in the enclosure treated with a mixture of Corexit and crude oil, in which a large fraction of the predominant bacterivores were eliminated. Biodegradation appeared to be more significant than abiotic processes in contributing to the loss of low volatility n-alkanes in Corexit-dispersed oil. Twenty-two days following its addition, 50% of the radiotracer was recovered: 3% in the suspended particulate fraction, 10% in sedimentary material, 36% as CO2, and less than 1% in the dissolved organic pool.
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