Abstract

An evaluation of the toxicity of seawater and sand sampled from an area of the Galician coast (NW Iberian Peninsula), highly impacted by the Prestige fuel-oil spill, was attempted by using marine invertebrate embryogenesis bioassays with bivalves and sea urchins. Water samples were frozen and toxicity testing was delayed until the reproductive season of the sea urchins. Sand samples were elutriated and tested within 13 d from sampling, using bivalves from commercial stocks. Sand elutriates were non toxic for embryos despite visual presence of small tar balls. In contrast, seawater from the most impacted site was highly toxic during the first days after the spill, with complete inhibition of embryogenesis even after 4-fold dilution. In a lower degree toxicity persisted for two months in light-exposed coastal water. These findings stress the impact to water column organisms of the less conspicuous and frequently overlooked water-accommodated fraction, rather than the more visible oil slick.

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