Da. Jones et al., LONG-TERM (1991-1995) MONITORING OF THE INTERTIDAL BIOTA OF SAUDI-ARABIA AFTER THE 1991 GULF-WAR OIL-SPILL, Marine pollution bulletin, 36(6), 1998, pp. 472-489
Quantitative surveys of the intertidal macrobiota were conducted betwe
en 1991 and 1995 in the Saudi Arabian Gulf along permanent transect li
nes (PTLs), These were established within the area impacted between Ra
s az-Zaur and Abu Ali as a result of the 1991 Gulf War, which now form
s the Jubail Wildlife Sanctuary, and at control unpolluted sites to th
e south of the region, Oil moved rapidly off the lower shore and becam
e impacted along the top of all shores within the study region. During
the study period this oil weathered and has largely disappeared from
rocky shores and decreased in extent on soft sediment shores. By Decem
ber 1991 between 50 and 100% mortality of biota had occurred on the up
per shore as a result of pollution, but by 1995 on the lower shore spe
cies diversity was similar to that found on unpolluted shores, and in
the upper eulittoral ranged from normal to 71% of that found on contro
l shores. At the top of the shore, numbers of individual species (dive
rsity) ranged from normal to 83% of that found on control shores. Abun
dances of individual species also increased during the survey period a
nd reached or exceeded levels found at lower shore levels on control s
hores, but at higher shore levels densities remained lower than normal
at some sites. Recovery rates for Saudi Arabian shores, although tent
ative for upper shore marshes, are within the time scale for shores wo
rldwide, but longer than for subtropical shores elsewhere. (C) 1998 El
sevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.