Abstract
We conducted a series of roller tank incubations with surface seawater from the Green Canyon oil reservoir, northern Gulf of Mexico, amended with either a natural oil slick (GCS-oil) or pristine oil. The goal was to test whether bacterial activities of natural surface water communities facilitate the formation of oil-rich marine snow (oil snow). Although oil snow did not form during any of our experiments, we found specific bacterial metabolic responses to the addition of GCS-oil that profoundly affected carbon cycling within our 4-days incubations. Peptidase and β-glucosidase activities indicative of bacterial enzymatic hydrolysis of peptides and carbohydrates, respectively, were suppressed upon the addition of GCS-oil relative to the non-oil treatment, suggesting that ascending oil and gas initially inhibits bacterial metabolism in surface water. Biodegradation of physically dispersed GCS-oil components, indicated by the degradation of lower molecular weight n-alkanes as well as the rapid transformation of particulate oil-carbon (C: N >40) into the DOC pool, led to the production of carbohydrate- and peptide-rich degradation byproducts and bacterial metabolites such as transparent exopolymer particles (TEP). TEP formation was highest at day 4 in the presence of GCS-oil; in contrast, TEP levels in the non-oil treatment already peaked at day 2. Cell-specific enzymatic activities closely followed TEP concentrations in the presence and absence of GCS-oil. These results demonstrate that the formation of oil slicks and activities of oil-degrading bacteria result in a temporal offset of microbial cycling of organic matter, affecting food web interactions and carbon cycling in surface waters over cold seeps.
Highlights
The northern Gulf of Mexico contains more than 200 hydrocarbon seeps over subseafloor oil reservoirs, releasing up to 1.1 × 108L year−1 of oil into the water column
All three samples were mostly depleted of
FORMATION OF MACRO-AGGREGATES Macro-aggregate formation was only observed in the presence of the particle slurry during the onboard Green canyon Oil Experiments (GOE)
Summary
The northern Gulf of Mexico contains more than 200 hydrocarbon seeps over subseafloor oil reservoirs, releasing up to 1.1 × 108L year−1 of oil into the water column. The majority of these seeps are located over the Green Canyon oil reservoir ∼200 miles off the Louisiana coast (MacDonald et al, 2002). Oil slick compounds that are not subject to immediate evaporation likely undergo further weathering processes at the sea surface (MacDonald et al, 2002). Despite the importance of such processes for carbon fluxes and food web interactions, the fate of oil slick residues is not well understood
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.