Recovery trajectories after in situ burning of an oiled wetland in coastal Louisiana, USA

被引:7
|
作者
Pahl, JW
Mendelssohn, IA [1 ]
Henry, CB
Hess, TJ
机构
[1] Louisiana State Univ, Wetland Biogeochem Inst, Baton Rouge, LA 70803 USA
[2] Duke Univ, Wetland Ctr, Nicholas Sch Environm & Earth Sci, Durham, NC 27708 USA
[3] NOAA, HAZMAT, Seattle, WA 98115 USA
[4] Louisiana Dept Wildlife & Fisheries, Grand Ctr, LA 70643 USA
关键词
oil spill; gas condensate; in situ burning; brackish marsh; Distichlis spicata; Spartina patens; Schoenoplectus robustus; Louisiana;
D O I
10.1007/s00267-002-2820-6
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The high degree of physical disturbance associated with conventional response options to oil spills in wetlands is driving the investigation of alternative cleanup methodologies. In March 1995, a spill of gas condensate in a brackish marsh at Rockefeller Wildlife Refuge in southwestern Louisiana was remediated through the use of in situ burning. An assessment of vegetation recovery was initiated in three treatment marshes: (1) oil-impacted and burned, (2) oil impacted and unburned, and (3) a nonoiled unburned reference. We compared percent cover, stem density, and biomass in the treatment marshes to define ecological recovery of the marsh vegetation and soil hydrocarbon content to determine the efficacy of in situ burning as a cleanup technique. Burning led to a rapid decrease in soil hydrocarbon concentrations in the impacted-and-burned marsh to background levels by the end of the first growing season. Although a management fire accidentally burned the oil-impacted-and-unburned and reference marshes in December 1995, stem density, live biomass, and total percent cover values in the oil-impacted-and-burned marsh were equivalent to those in the other treatment marshes after three years. In addition, plant community composition within the oil-impacted-and-burned marsh was similar to the codominant mix of the grasses Distichlis spicata (salt grass) and Spartina patens (wire grass) characteristic of the surrounding marsh after the same time period, Rapid recovery of the oil-impacted-and-unburned marsh was likely due to lower initial hydrocarbon exposure. Water levels inundating the soil surface of this grass-dominated marsh and the timing of the in situ burn early in the growing season were important factors contributing to the rapid recovery of this wetland. The results of this in situ burn evaluation support the conclusion that burning, under the proper conditions, can be relied upon as an effective cleanup response to hydrocarbon spills in herbaceous wetlands.
引用
收藏
页码:236 / 251
页数:16
相关论文
共 17 条
  • [1] Recovery Trajectories After In Situ Burning of an Oiled Wetland in Coastal Louisiana, USA
    JAMES W. PAHL
    IRVING A. MENDELSSOHN
    CHARLES B. HENRY, JR
    THOMAS J. HESS
    [J]. Environmental Management, 2003, 31 : 0236 - 0251
  • [2] Burning of oiled Louisiana coastal marsh: Field evaluation
    DeLaune, RD
    Lindau, CW
    Devai, I
    Henry, CB
    [J]. 1997 INTERNATIONAL OIL SPILL CONFERENCE: IMPROVING ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION, 1997, : 903 - 904
  • [3] Posthurricane Salinity in an Impounded Coastal Wetland (Bayou Sauvage, Louisiana, USA)
    Keim, Richard F.
    Lemon, Mary Grace T.
    Oakman, Emily C.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COASTAL RESEARCH, 2019, 35 (05) : 1003 - 1009
  • [4] AN INVENTORY OF WETLAND IMPOUNDMENTS IN THE COASTAL ZONE OF LOUISIANA, USA - HISTORICAL TRENDS
    DAY, RH
    HOLZ, RK
    DAY, JW
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 1990, 14 (02) : 229 - 240
  • [5] A RATIONALE FOR COASTAL WETLAND RESTORATION THROUGH SPOIL BANK MANAGEMENT IN LOUISIANA, USA
    TURNER, RE
    SWENSON, EM
    LEE, JM
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 1994, 18 (02) : 271 - 282
  • [6] The application of in-situ burning to a Louisiana coastal marsh following a hydrocarbon product spill: Preliminary assessment of site recovery
    Pahl, JW
    Mendelssohn, IA
    Hess, TJ
    [J]. 1997 INTERNATIONAL OIL SPILL CONFERENCE: IMPROVING ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION, 1997, : 823 - 828
  • [7] Growth and allocation by a keystone wetland plant, Panicum hemitomon, and implications for managing and rehabilitating coastal freshwater marshes, Louisiana, USA
    C. Ellery Mayence
    Mark W. Hester
    [J]. Wetlands Ecology and Management, 2010, 18 : 149 - 163
  • [8] Growth and allocation by a keystone wetland plant, Panicum hemitomon, and implications for managing and rehabilitating coastal freshwater marshes, Louisiana, USA
    Mayence, C. Ellery
    Hester, Mark W.
    [J]. WETLANDS ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2010, 18 (02) : 149 - 163
  • [9] System response, nutria herbivory, and vegetation recovery of a wetland receiving secondarily-treated effluent in coastal Louisiana
    Shaffer, Gary P.
    Day, John W.
    Hunter, Rachael G.
    Lane, Robert R.
    Lundberg, Christopher J.
    Wood, W. Bernard
    Hillmann, Eva R.
    Day, Jason N.
    Strickland, Eric
    Kandalepas, Demetra
    [J]. ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING, 2015, 79 : 120 - 131
  • [10] Temporal variability in the relative strength of external drivers controlling ecosystem succession in a coastal wetland near Bayou Lafourche, southeast Louisiana, USA
    Ryu, Junghyung
    Liu, Kam-biu
    McCloskey, Terrence A.
    [J]. QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2022, 276