No. 2 fuel oil compound retention and release by Mytilus edulis : 1983 Cape Cod Canal oil spill
No. 2 fuel oil compound retention and release by Mytilus edulis : 1983 Cape Cod Canal oil spill
Date
1986-03
Authors
Farrington, John W.
Xiaoping, Jia
Clifford, C. Hovey
Tripp, Bruce W.
Livramento, Joaquim B.
Davis, Alan C.
Frew, Nelson M.
Johnson, Carl G.
Xiaoping, Jia
Clifford, C. Hovey
Tripp, Bruce W.
Livramento, Joaquim B.
Davis, Alan C.
Frew, Nelson M.
Johnson, Carl G.
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Location
Cape Cod Canal, MA
DOI
10.1575/1912/7870
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Keywords
Mytilus edulis
Oil spills
Oil pollution of the sea
Oil spills
Oil pollution of the sea
Abstract
Retention and release of No. 2 fuel oil compounds by Mytilus edulis
contaminated by a small oil spill in the Cape Cod Canal in 1983 has been
studied for the population "in situ" and for a subsample transplanted to
a clean laboratory seawater system. Compounds analyzed include C13 to
C24 n-alkanes; pristane; phytane; C2-, C3-naphthalenes; fluorene; phenanthrene;
C1-, C2-, C3-phenanthrenes; fluoranthene; pyrene and dibenzothiophene.
Biological half-lives were determined for the compounds from Day-3
to Day-29 following the spill and ranged from 1.5 days for C2-naphthalenes
to 9.9 days for C2-phenanthrenes. Biological half-lives for the unresolved
complex mixture determined by gas chromatographic analyses were 17
days for the alkane-cycloalkane fraction and 35 days for the aromatic
fraction. Results compared favorably with data from a small oil spill
contaminating the same mussel population at the same time of the year in
1978, although marked differences were noted for certain parameters.
Gas chromatographic-mass spectrometer analyses of C2- and C3-phenanthrenes
revealed changes in relative abundance of compounds within isomer
groups from samples at Day-29 to the time when no further detection of
fuel oil was noted. These results suggest a release or metabolism of
these compounds which is molecular structure specific.
This study also demonstrated the feasibility of training an analyst
unfamiliar with analyses of hydrocarbons in tissues to conduct high resolution
glass capillary GC analyses and some aspects of GCMS data systems
output within a period of four to five months.
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Citation
Farrington, J. W., Xiaoping, J., Clifford, C. H., Tripp, B. W., Livramento, J. B., Davis, A. C., Frew, N. M., & Johnson, C. G. (1986). No. 2 fuel oil compound retention and release by Mytilus edulis: 1983 Cape Cod Canal oil spill. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. https://doi.org/10.1575/1912/7870