4.2 Article

Operational Forecast of Oil Spill Trajectory and Assessment of Impacts on Intertidal Macrobenthos in the Dahanu Region, West Coast of India

Journal

JOURNAL OF COASTAL RESEARCH
Volume 29, Issue 2, Pages 398-409

Publisher

COASTAL EDUCATION & RESEARCH FOUNDATION
DOI: 10.2112/JCOASTRES-D-12-00071.1

Keywords

Oil spill; model; tides; currents; intertidal; macrobenthos; Lagrangian circulation; Dahanu

Funding

  1. MoES, government of India

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Naidu, V.S.; Sukumaran, S.; Dubbewar, O., and Reddy, G.S., 2013. Operational forecast of oil spill trajectory and assessment of impacts on intertidal macrobenthos in the Dahanu region, west coast of India. Journal of Coastal Research, 29(2), 398-409. Coconut Creek, (Florida), ISSN 0749-0208. A two-dimensional model has been developed and applied to the hypothetical spills of crude oil in the Dahanu area on the west coast of India. An attempt has also been made to quantify the intertidal macrobenthic biomass and population affected in the region. Data on tides and currents were collected at Dahanu during October and November 2008. The currents recorded at a relatively offshore location show that the midcurrents were stronger than the bottom currents. The currents at a nearshore location were influenced by the Dahanu creek currents. Offshore currents were relatively stronger than the nearshore currents. The model calibration results of hydrodynamics show that the circulation was almost in agreement with the observations except in the creek zone. An oil spill model was run for two weather conditions, viz., postmonsoon and monsoon. An instantaneous crude oil spill of 500 tons (534 m(3)) was considered. The results show that the spill would move offshore in the presence of postmonsoonal winds. However, during the monsoon, the spill would move toward the coast. According to the positions of the occurrence, the spill would reach the coast within 13 to 28 hours from the time of spill. The coastline stretches an affected range from 2.1 to 2.8 km. The estimated affected macrobenthic biomass and population would be 109.2 to 145.6 kg and 1.9 to 2.5 x 10(7), respectively. The major species affected would be polychaetes.

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