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Developmental effects in fish embryos exposed to oil dispersions – the impact of crude oil micro-droplets

Abstract

During accidental crude oil spills and permitted discharges of produced water into the marine environment, a large fraction of naturally occurring oil components will be contained in micron-sized oil droplets. Toxicity is assumed to be associated with the dissolved fraction of oil components, however the potential contribution of oil droplets to toxicity is currently not well known. In the present work we wanted to evaluate the contribution of oil droplets to effects on normal development of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) through exposing embryos for 96 h to un-filtered (dispersions containing droplets) and filtered (water soluble fractions) dispersions in a flow-through system at dispersion concentrations ranging from 0.14 to 4.34 mg oil/L. After exposure, the embryos were kept in clean seawater until hatch when survival, development and morphology were assessed. The experiment was performed at two different stages of embryonic development to cover two potentially sensitive stages (gastrulation and organogenesis). Exposure of cod embryos to crude oil dispersions caused acute and delayed toxicity, including manifestation of morphological deformations in hatched larvae. Oil droplets appear to contribute to some of the observed effects including mortality, larvae condition (standard length, body surface, and yolk sac size), spinal deformations as well as alterations in craniofacial and jaw development. The timing of exposure may be essential for the development of effects as higher acute mortality was observed when embryos were exposed from the start of gastrulation (Experiment 1) than when exposed during organogenesis (Experiment 2). Even though low mortality was observed when exposed during organogenesis, concentration-dependent mortality was observed during recovery.
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Category

Academic article

Client

  • Other / BP EXPLORATION & PRODUCTION INC., ANDTHE BP GULF COAST RESTO
  • Other / BP Exploration & Production Inc., andthe BP Gulf Coast Resto

Language

English

Author(s)

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Ocean / Climate and Environment
  • Norwegian University of Science and Technology
  • Andre institusjoner

Year

2019

Published in

Marine Environmental Research

ISSN

0141-1136

Publisher

Elsevier

Volume

150:104753

Page(s)

1 - 12

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