Ta. Dean et al., EELGRASS (ZOSTERA-MARINA L.) IN PRINCE-WILLIAM-SOUND, ALASKA - EFFECTS OF THE EXXON-VALDEZ OIL-SPILL, Marine pollution bulletin, 36(3), 1998, pp. 201-210
Possible injury to, and recovery of, populations of eelgrass, Zostera
marina L., in Prince William Sound were assessed following the Exxon V
aldez oil spill by comparing populations at oiled vs reference sites b
etween 1990 and 1995. Eelgrass beds in heavily oiled bays were exposed
to moderate concentrations of hydrocarbons. In 1990, a year after the
spill, concentrations of total polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons avera
ged nearly 4000 ng g(-1) dry weight of sediment at oiled sites compare
d to less than 700 ng g(-1) at reference sites. Injuries to eelgrass,
if any, appeared to be slight and did not persist for more than a year
after the spill, There were possible effects on the average density o
f shoots and flowering shoots, as these were 24 and 62% lower at oiled
than at reference sites in 1990 (p < 0.10 for both). However, there w
ere no differences between oiled and reference sites with respect to e
elgrass biomass, seed density, seed germination or the incidence of no
rmal mitosis in seedlings, and there were no signs of the elimination
of eelgrass beds. Populations recovered from possible injuries by 1991
, as there was a sharp decline in hydrocarbon concentrations and there
were no differences in shoot or flowering shoot densities between oil
ed and reference sites in 1990 or subsequent years. (C) 1998 Elsevier
Science Ltd, All rights reserved.