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1.
Sci Total Environ ; 929: 172536, 2024 Jun 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38643886

ABSTRACT

Oil and gas exploitation introduces toxic contaminants such as hydrocarbons and heavy metals to the surrounding sediment, resulting in deleterious impacts on marine benthic communities. This study combines benthic monitoring data over a 30-year period in the North Sea with dietary information on >1400 taxa to quantify the effects of active oil and gas platforms on benthic food webs using a multiple before-after control-impact experiment. Contamination from oil and gas platforms caused declines in benthic food web complexity, community abundance, and biodiversity. Fewer trophic interactions and increased connectance indicated that the community became dominated by generalists adapting to alternative resources, leading to simpler but more connected food webs in contaminated environments. Decreased mean body mass, shorter food chains, and the dominance of small detritivores such as Capitella capitata near to structures suggested a disproportionate loss of larger organisms from higher trophic levels. These patterns were associated with concentrations of hydrocarbons and heavy metals that exceed OSPAR's guideline thresholds of sediment toxicity. This study provides new evidence to better quantify and manage the environmental consequences of oil and gas exploitation at sea.


Subject(s)
Biodiversity , Environmental Monitoring , Food Chain , Invertebrates , Water Pollutants, Chemical , Animals , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Aquatic Organisms , North Sea , Metals, Heavy/analysis , Oil and Gas Fields , Geologic Sediments/chemistry
2.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 8309, 2023 Dec 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38097543

ABSTRACT

Metabolism, the biological processing of energy and materials, scales predictably with temperature and body size. Temperature effects on metabolism are normally studied via acute exposures, which overlooks the capacity for organisms to moderate their metabolism following chronic exposure to warming. Here, we conduct respirometry assays in situ and after transplanting salmonid fish among different streams to disentangle the effects of chronic and acute thermal exposure. We find a clear temperature dependence of metabolism for the transplants, but not the in-situ assays, indicating that chronic exposure to warming can attenuate salmonid thermal sensitivity. A bioenergetic model accurately captures the presence of fish in warmer streams when accounting for chronic exposure, whereas it incorrectly predicts their local extinction with warming when incorporating the acute temperature dependence of metabolism. This highlights the need to incorporate the potential for thermal acclimation or adaptation when forecasting the consequences of global warming on ecosystems.


Subject(s)
Salmonidae , Animals , Temperature , Ecosystem , Global Warming , Energy Metabolism , Acclimatization
3.
Microorganisms ; 9(6)2021 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34206054

ABSTRACT

This study evaluated the effects of three commercial dispersants (Finasol OSR 52, Slickgone NS, Superdispersant 25) and three biosurfactants (rhamnolipid, trehalolipid, sophorolipid) in crude-oil seawater microcosms. We analysed the crucial early bacterial response (1 and 3 days). In contrast, most analyses miss this key period and instead focus on later time points after oil and dispersant addition. By focusing on the early stage, we show that dispersants and biosurfactants, which reduce the interfacial surface tension of oil and water, significantly increase the abundance of hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria, and the rate of hydrocarbon biodegradation, within 24 h. A succession of obligate hydrocarbonoclastic bacteria (OHCB), driven by metabolite niche partitioning, is demonstrated. Importantly, this succession has revealed how the OHCB Oleispira, hitherto considered to be a psychrophile, can dominate in the early stages of oil-spill response (1 and 3 days), outcompeting all other OHCB, at the relatively high temperature of 16 °C. Additionally, we demonstrate how some dispersants or biosurfactants can select for specific bacterial genera, especially the biosurfactant rhamnolipid, which appears to provide an advantageous compatibility with Pseudomonas, a genus in which some species synthesize rhamnolipid in the presence of hydrocarbons.

4.
Front Microbiol ; 11: 1706, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32765479

ABSTRACT

In September 2017 the Agia Zoni II sank in the Saronic Gulf, Greece, releasing approximately 500 tonnes of heavy fuel oil, contaminating the Salamina and Athens coastlines. Effects of the spill, and remediation efforts, on sediment microbial communities were quantified over the following 7 months. Five days post-spill, the concentration of measured hydrocarbons within surface sediments of contaminated beaches was 1,093-3,773 µg g-1 dry sediment (91% alkanes and 9% polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons), but measured hydrocarbons decreased rapidly after extensive clean-up operations. Bacterial genera known to contain oil-degrading species increased in abundance, including Alcanivorax, Cycloclasticus, Oleibacter, Oleiphilus, and Thalassolituus, and the species Marinobacter hydrocarbonoclasticus from approximately 0.02 to >32% (collectively) of the total bacterial community. Abundance of genera with known hydrocarbon-degraders then decreased 1 month after clean-up. However, a legacy effect was observed within the bacterial community, whereby Alcanivorax and Cycloclasticus persisted for several months after the oil spill in formerly contaminated sites. This study is the first to evaluate the effect of the Agia Zoni II oil-spill on microbial communities in an oligotrophic sea, where in situ oil-spill studies are rare. The results aid the advancement of post-spill monitoring models, which can predict the capability of environments to naturally attenuate oil.

5.
J Phys Chem B ; 112(49): 15903-6, 2008 Dec 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19368035

ABSTRACT

Hydrated proteins exhibit a broad dielectric loss extending over the frequency range from 1 MHz to 10 GHz which can be decomposed into a number of constituent dispersions. One of these dispersions with a relaxation time of approximately 18 ns has been attributed to the relaxation of protein backbone peptide groups in the protein interior. In the work reported here, this dielectric dispersion was investigated as a function of temperature for the enzyme glucose oxidase. In the low temperature region, the temperature-dependence of the dispersion magnitude showed a marked increase in gradient at a critical temperature indicating a transition from a relatively rigid to a more mobile protein structure. At higher temperatures, the response increased rapidly, reaching a maximum value at a second critical temperature. Glucose oxidase samples raised above this temperature showed significantly reduced enzyme activity. Both critical temperatures decreased with increasing protein water content. This is consistent with a scheme in which the hydrated glassy protein undergoes a change in structural mobility at the glass transition temperature and experiences an irreversible change in conformation at a higher denaturation temperature. Both glass transition and denaturation temperatures are key indicators of protein stability and are important in the production and storage of protein based pharmaceuticals.


Subject(s)
Glass , Proteins/chemistry , Temperature , Protein Denaturation , Time Factors
6.
Appl Opt ; 44(7): 1332-41, 2005 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15765714

ABSTRACT

A new method for the retrieval of the spectral refractive indices of micrometer-sized particles from infrared aerosol extinction spectra has been developed. With this method we use a classical damped harmonic-oscillator model of molecular absorption in conjunction with Mie scattering to model extinction spectra, which we then fit to the measurements using a numerical optimal estimation algorithm. The main advantage of this method over the more traditional Kramers-Kronig approach is that it allows the full complex refractive-index spectra, along with the parameters of the particle size distribution, to be retrieved from a single extinction spectrum. The retrieval scheme has been extensively characterized and has been found to provide refractive indices with a maximum uncertainty of approximately 10% (with a minimum of approximately 0.1%). Comparison of refractive indices calculated from measurements of a ternary solution of HNO3, H2SO4, and H2O with those published in J. Phys. Chem. A 104, 783 (2000) show similar differences as found by other authors.

7.
Appl Opt ; 43(28): 5386-93, 2004 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15495430

ABSTRACT

Analytical expressions are found for the derivatives of commonly used Mie scattering parameters, in particular the absorption and the scattering efficiencies, and for the angular intensity functions. These expressions are based on the analytical derivatives of the Mie scattering amplitudes a(n) and b(n) with respect to the particle size parameter and complex refractive index. In addition, analytical derivatives are found for the volume absorption and scattering coefficients, as well as for the intensity functions of a population of particles with log normal size distribution. These derivatives are given with respect to the total number density, to the median radius and spread of the distribution, and to the refractive index. Comparison between analytically and numerically computed derivatives showed the analytical version to be 2.5 to 6.5 times as fast for the single-particle and particle-distribution cases, respectively.

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