2020
DOI: 10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-14807
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To burn or not to burn? Impact of in-situ oil burning by-products on marine plankton: A mesocosm experimental approach

Abstract: <p>In-situ oil burning (isOB) is one of the oil-spill mitigation measures and has been used after some major oil-spill events such as the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Although the ecological impact of oil spills and mitigation measures on the marine ecosystem are of great interest, the toxicity and biodegradation potential of isOB by-products have been poorly addressed and mainly are an unknown.</p><p>We investigated the effects of burned oil resi… Show more

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“…The experiments with gastropod larvae were a side study of a joint mesocosm experiment conducted at the Hellenic Centre for Marine Research in Crete (Greece) to evaluate the impacts of in situ oil burning on marine plankton. 42 The mesocosms consisted of transparent food-grade polyethylene bags mounted on circular metal frames attached to a land-based open pool (350 m 3 , 5 m deep) with a continuous flow of in situ seawater. The mesocosms were filled with 3.5 m 3 of seawater collected at 1 m depth from a Cretan Sea coastal station (0.2 miles off the North coast of Crete) using a rotary submersible pump in May 2018.…”
Section: Experimental Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The experiments with gastropod larvae were a side study of a joint mesocosm experiment conducted at the Hellenic Centre for Marine Research in Crete (Greece) to evaluate the impacts of in situ oil burning on marine plankton. 42 The mesocosms consisted of transparent food-grade polyethylene bags mounted on circular metal frames attached to a land-based open pool (350 m 3 , 5 m deep) with a continuous flow of in situ seawater. The mesocosms were filled with 3.5 m 3 of seawater collected at 1 m depth from a Cretan Sea coastal station (0.2 miles off the North coast of Crete) using a rotary submersible pump in May 2018.…”
Section: Experimental Designmentioning
confidence: 99%