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1.
Ecotoxicology ; 5(4): 229-51, 1996 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24193814

ABSTRACT

: Mesocosm facilities consisting of five 3.5 m(3) stainless steel tanks filled with seawater from the St Lawrence Estuary (Québec, Canada) were used to conduct a 2 month experiment under the natural conditions prevailing at the end of the winter in subarctic environments, with seawater temperatures ranging from-1.5°C (surface ice cover) to 3°C. Various oil treatments were simulated in mesocosms: Forties crude oil was chemically dispersed, adsorbed onto an immersed substrate and spilled without any treatment. Total oil concentrations ranged from <1 mgl(-1) (untreated oil) to 44.6 mgl(-1) (dispersed oil). Contrasting with the parent crude oil and dispersed oil, the dissolved phase was enriched with low molecular weight polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH). As revealed by pH variations, chlorophyll a contents and degraded pigments, the phytoplankton growth was inhibited early in tanks contaminated with dispersed and adsorbed oil. Although global measurements showed a recovery of the microalgal activity while the dispersed oil was diluted in a flow-through cascade system, the specific composition was quite different from the control, with an increase in small microflagellate species and a marked decline in the diversity of centric diatoms. Small microflagellates also dominated in the heavily oil-contaminated surface microlayer. The growth of viable heterotrophic bacteria (VHB) was immediately stimulated by both dispersed and adsorbed oil (10(4)-10(5) colony forming units per ml) and oil-degrading bacteria (ODB) reached maximum densities (10(2) CFU ml(-1)) later in the experiment. The adaptation of the indigenous community was assessed using the ODB/VHB ratio, which increased by ten times in the seawater contaminated with dispersed oil. No significant bacterial enhancement was observed in the tank that received untreated oil. No bacterial enrichment was found in the surface microlayer. In sediment traps, the bacterial density increased with the amount of total settling matter and oil residues.

2.
Microb Ecol ; 25(3): 263-73, 1993 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24189922

ABSTRACT

Mesocosm studies were conducted to evaluate the effect of dispersed oil on total and heterotrophic bacterial communities of under-ice seawater from the St. Lawrence Estuary. A regular survey of bacterial changes in the oil-contaminated seawater was performed during a two week period. The bacterial community structure was investigated by carrying out 27 morphological and biochemical tests on 168 isolated strains. The results show a detectable but transient response of the bacterial community to crude oil addition. While total bacterial counts were approximately constant during the experiment, dispersed oil induced an increase in heterotrophic bacterial microflora (from 10(4) to 10(5) bacteria ml(-1) after two weeks of contamination). The dispersed oil appeared to have an inhibitory effect on some components of the bacterial community. A decrease of most probable number values was observed just after addition of crude oil in the most polluted tanks and one day later in the less polluted tank. However, except for the most polluted tank, this adverse effect disappeared rapidly. While the dispersed oil induced a total disappearance of some components of the bacterial community in the most polluted tank, the structure of the bacterial community in the less polluted tank appeared relatively unchanged after 14 days of contamination.

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