FireDOC Search

Author
Mendelssohn, I. A. | Lin, Q. | Carney, K. | Bryner, N. P. | Walton, W. D.
Title
Salt Marsh Recovery After In-Situ Burning for Oil Spill Remediation: Effects of Water Depth and Burn Duration.
Coporate
Wetland Biogeochemistry Institute Louisiana State Univ., Baton Rouge National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MD
Journal
Environmental Science and Technology, Vol. 36, No. 4, 576-581, 2002
Report
NIST SP 995; Volume 2; NIST SP 995; Volume 2, 2000; March 2003; March 2003, 37 p.
Keywords
oil spills | in situ burning | water | statistical analysis
Identifiers
petroleum hydrocarbon concentrations; soil temperature; plant recovery
Abstract
Oil spills pose a serious risk to the health of wetland systems. A cleanup technique that is compatible with the wetland environment and is consistent with present wetland management procedures would be highly valued. In-situ burning of oiled wetlands potenually provides such a procedure. However, the burning of wetlands can have beneficial as well as detrimental impacts. Factors, such as water depth over the soil surface, the season of the burn, and burning intensity and duration may influence the response of wetlands to the burn, yet these factors have not been adequately addressed scientifically. A mesocosm scale investigation was conducted to study the effects of water depth, burn duration, and oil application on the relationship between recovery of marsh vegetation, soil temperature and oil remediation. Marsh sods, which were collected from a south Louisiana salt marsh dominated by Spartina alterniflora, were instrumented with thermocouples and assigned to the following treatments: (a) Oil exposure: unweathered diesel (1.5 l/m2) versus no diesel application, (b) Burn duration: 400 s (seconds) versus 1400 s (seconds), and (c) Water depth: -1O, -2, 0, and 10 cm of the marsh surface relative to the water level. Soil temperature, as a function of soil depth and sod elevation, was continuously recorded during the burn and for a total of 5400 s post-burn. After the burns, the mesocosms were returned to the greenhouse where plant recovery was monitored. Soil samples for total petroleum hydrocarbon and gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) analyses were collected 24 hours after oil addition and 1 day and 7 months post-burn.