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PAHs in high Arctic copepods Calanus hyperboreus following exposure of residues from in situ burning of oil spill
Summary
Researchers studied whether burning oil spills in the Arctic creates harmful polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons that accumulate in copepods, a key marine organism. The study found that in situ burning actually reduced overall PAH exposure for copepods, as the pyrogenic compounds generated during burning were not significantly bioconcentrated by the organisms.
In situ burning of marine oil spills reduces the total amount of oil in the environment, but a negative side effect may be the generation of environmentally hazardous polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) that may pose a risk for bioaccumulation, particularly in organisms having a high lipid content. In this study uptake of PAHs from oil and burn residue were examined in the high arctic copepod Calanus hyperboreus. A major part of the low ring number petrogenic PAHs in the oil was removed during burning and relative higher concentrations of pyrogenic high ring number PAHs was found in the burn residue. This suggests that burning markedly reduces the general PAH exposure load. Furthermore, the pyrogenic PAHs generated during the burn were not bioconcentrated to quantifiable levels in the copepods. We conclude that in situ burning can mitigate the potential risk of PAH uptake for copepods and other pelagic organisms in the marine environment as the pyrogenic PAHs only pose low risk for uptake from the water by the copepods and other pelagic organisms.
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