Jw. Short et al., Natural hydrocarbon background in benthic sediments of Prince William Sound, Alaska: Oil vs coal, ENV SCI TEC, 33(1), 1999, pp. 34-42
Citations number
28
Categorie Soggetti
Environment/Ecology,"Environmental Engineering & Energy
The source of the background hydrocarbons in benthic sediments of Prince Wi
lliam Sound (PWS), AK, where the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill (EVOS) occurre
d, has been ascribed to oil seeps in coastal areas of the Gulf of Alaska (G
OA). We present evidence that coal is a more plausible source, including (i
) high concentrations of total PAH (TPAH), between 1670 and 3070 ng/g, in c
ontinental shelf sediments adjacent to the coastal region containing extens
ive coal deposits; (ii) PAH composition patterns of sediments along with pr
edictive models that are consistent with coal but not oil; (iii) low ratios
(<0.2) of triaromatic steranes to methylchrysenes found in sediments and c
oals, contrasting with the high ratios (11 and 13) found in seep oil; and (
iv) bioaccumulation of PAH in salmon collected within 100 m of the Katalla
oil seeps but not in filter-feeding mussels collected near oilfield drainag
es 9 km from the seeps, indicating negligible transport of bioavailable PAH
from Katalla seeps to the GOA. In contrast with oil, PAH in coal are not b
ioavailable, so the presence of coal in these benthic sediments confers no
adaptive benefit to biota of the marine ecosystem with respect to PAH insul
ts from anthropogenic sources.