4.5 Article

CHARACTERIZATION OF DISSOLVED AND PARTICULATE PHASES OF WATER ACCOMMODATED FRACTIONS USED TO CONDUCT AQUATIC TOXICITY TESTING IN SUPPORT OF THE DEEPWATER HORIZON NATURAL RESOURCE DAMAGE ASSESSMENT

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY
Volume 36, Issue 6, Pages 1460-1472

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/etc.3803

Keywords

Environmental partitioning; Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs); Oil spills; Marine toxicity tests; Water accommodated fraction; Corexit 9500 dispersant

Funding

  1. NRDA through NOAA Damage Assessment, Remediation and Restoration Program (DARRP) (NOAA) [AB133C-11-CQ-0051]

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In response to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, the Natural Resource Trustees implemented a toxicity testing program that included 4 different Deepwater Horizon oils that ranged from fresh to weathered, and 3 different oil-in-water preparation methods (including one that used the chemical dispersant Corexit 9500) to prepare a total of 12 chemically unique water accommodated fractions (WAFs). We determined how the different WAF preparation methods, WAF concentrations, and oil types influenced the chemical composition and concentration of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in the dissolved and particulate phases over time periods used in standard toxicity tests. In WAFs prepared with the same starting oil and oil-to-water ratio, the composition and concentration of the dissolved fractions were similar across all preparation methods. However, these similarities diverged when dilutions of the 3 WAF methods were compared. In WAFs containing oil droplets, we found that the dissolved phase was a small fraction of the total PAH concentration for the high-concentration stock WAFs; however, the dissolved phase became the dominant fraction when it was diluted to lower concentrations. Furthermore, decreases in concentration over time were mainly related to surfacing of the larger oil droplets. The initial mean diameters of the droplets were approximately 5 to 10 mu m, with a few droplets larger than 30 mu m. After 96 h, the mean droplet size decreased to 3 to 5 mu m, with generally all droplets larger than 10 mu m resurfacing. These data provide a detailed assessment of the concentration and form (dissolved vs particulate) of the PAHs in our WAF exposures, measurements that are important for determining the effects of oil on aquatic species. (C) 2017 SETAC

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