Abstract

As part of a study to investigate the effect of oil seeps on intertidal organisms, oil extracts of Blackstone oil shale from Kimmeridge on the Dorset coast were used in laboratory experiments to test their effect on the settlement of the barnacle Balanus balanoides (L.). Thin films of oil extract painted on the surface of pits in slate panels had no effect on cyprid settlement when applied up to a surface density of 2.8 g · m −2, representing a thickness of 3.3 μm. Larger surface densities of oil stimulated cyprids to settle in far greater numbers than on unoiled panels. The maximum effect was obtained at a surface density of between 14.0 and 56.0 g · m −2, representing a thickness of 16.5 μm and 66.0 μm. With higher concentration of oil in the pits, stimulation to settle was reduced although cyprid settlement was still encouraged at a surface density of oil of 112g · m −2 or 132 μm thickness. The unfractionated crude oil shale extract was a less powerful stimulus for barnacle settlement than a partially purified solution of the integumental protein arthropodin, another strong settlement inducer for barnacle cyprids.

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