Comparison of the Spatial Extent, Impacts to Shorelines, and Ecosystem and 4-dimensional Characteristics of Simulated Oil Spills
Document Type
Book Chapter
Publication Date
2020
Keywords
Oil spill impacts, Gulf of Mexico, Deepwater Horizon, Oil transport model
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
https://doi.org//10.1007/978-3-030-12963-7_20
Abstract
The ever-growing increase in deep-sea oil explorations in the Gulf of Mexico (GoM) has been raising concerns with regard to future oil spills. Major oil spills in the GoM such as the Deepwater Horizon (DWH 2010) and the Ixtoc 1 (1979) resulted in extensive pollution of the pelagic, sea-floor, and coastal ecosystems. Oil spill transport and fate models are effective tools which allow a spatiotemporally explicit reconstruction of oil spills, while accounting for key processes such as evaporation, sedimentation, biodegradation, and dissolution. Oil transport data can be fed into an ecosystem model to help estimate system-scale changes in biodiversity and impacts on the delivery of ecosystem services. The increase in deep-sea oil-drilling endeavors warrants an evaluation of the potential outcomes and effects of oil spills. However, each spill scenario is a complex 4-D problem, spanning over wide spatiotemporal dimensions, affecting various media (water, sediments, coast, air); hence it is difficult to effectively evaluate the differences between various oil spill scenarios.
In the current chapter, we examine quantifiable variables, which enable an effective comparison of the outcomes of four different scenarios: the DWH (DB_control), the DWH occurring during the fall (DB_Fall), east GoM scenario (DB_AL2), and west GoM scenario (DB_AL3). Specifically, we evaluate the total area and volume of oil-affected waters, the total water area and volume affected by toxic oil concentrations, the length of the shoreline affected by oil, and the total area of the sedimented oil. The oil transport model is coupled to Atlantis, a biogeochemical ecosystem model, to examine changes in the ecosystem biota. The depth and location of the oil vary with each scenario and so affect different habitats, species, and life stages. We consider relative impacts on pelagic and demersal food webs, shifts in age structure, changes in diet, and impacts on the sustainability of exploited species. We report the differences between the different oil spills and discuss their implications. Overall, the results differed slightly and not significantly between the four scenarios, ranked from most to least impactful: DB_AL2 > DB_control > DWH_Fall > DB_AL3. This work suggests that a “DWH” occurring at a different time or place in the GoM would result in impact fairly similar to that occurred during the actual DWH. This is relevant given the extensive petroleum-related activity in the GoM.
Was this content written or created while at USF?
Yes
Citation / Publisher Attribution
Comparison of the Spatial Extent, Impacts to Shorelines, and Ecosystem and 4-dimensional Characteristics of Simulated Oil Spills, in S. A. Murawski, C. H. Ainsworth, S. Gilbert, D. J. Hollander, C. B. Paris, M. Schlüter and D. L. Wetzel (Eds.), Scenarios and Responses to Future Deep Oil Spills: Fighting the Next War, Springer, p. 340-354
Scholar Commons Citation
Berenshtein, Igal; Perlin, Natalie; Ainsworth, Cameron; Ortega-Ortiz, Joel G.; Vaz, Ana C.; and Paris, Claire B., "Comparison of the Spatial Extent, Impacts to Shorelines, and Ecosystem and 4-dimensional Characteristics of Simulated Oil Spills" (2020). C-IMAGE Publications. 144.
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/cimage_pubs/144
Comments
Data used in this book chapter are available for download.
Connectivity Modeling System simulation of the Macondo Well Blowout evolution April through October 2010: The effects of circulation and wind-induced drift on subsea oil transport
Distribution of oil concentrations and oil mass in the Gulf of Mexico estimated from the Connectivity Modeling System simulation of the Deepwater Horizon 2010 oil spill
Distribution of oil concentrations in the Gulf of Mexico estimated from the Connectivity Modeling System simulation of the Deepwater Horizon 2010 oil spill; with wind drift
Three-dimensional daily oil concentrations and oil mass estimates in the Gulf of Mexico from the modeling of the Deepwater Horizon 2010 oil spill using a Connectivity Modeling System