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Development of a laboratory exposure system using marine fish to carry out realistic effect studies with produced water discharged from offshore oil production

Academic article
Year of publication
2009
Journal
Marine Pollution Bulletin
External websites
Cristin
Doi
Involved from NIVA
Jonny Beyer
Contributors
Rolf Sundt, Sonnich Meier, Grete Jonsson, Steinar Sanni, Jonny Beyer

Summary

A biotest system for environmentally realistic exposure of fish to produced water (PW) was developed and tested. Authentic PW was collected at an oil production platform in the North Sea and preserved by freezing in multiple aliquors a 25 L. After transport to the test laboratory onshore, daily PW aliquots were thawed, homogenised and administered to the test fish, Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua), in two diluted exposure concentrations, 0.1% and 0.5%, during a 15 d period, using a continuous flow-through exposure setup. Positive control groups were exposed to two crude oil treatments for comparison. Chemical analyses showed that alkylphenol (AP) and PAH concentrations in PW exposure waters were very low. Observations of significantly increased AP and PAH metabolite levels in PW exposed fish demonstrated the suitability of the biotest system for its use in biological exposure/effect studies of PW, and it also demonstrated the sensitivity of bile metabolites as PW exposure markers in fish. The relevance of the biotest system for PW effect studies and for validating modelled environmental risk estimates of PW dischargers from offshore oil production is discussed. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.