Oil Spills in Oceans Lead to Photo-oxidation within Hours Affecting Marine Environment

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A new study conducted by the University of Miami (UM) Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science has shed new light on oil dissipates in the oceans after spills. It also talks about the effects chemical dispersants have on the marine environment. The study demonstrated that under realistic environmental conditions, oil drifting in oceans after a spill could photo-oxidise into persistent compounds within hours to days. This may take place sooner than the long periods of time, as thought previously by the scientists during the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill.

The new research is the first model result to support the new example of photo-oxidation that emerged from laboratory work. Usually, after an oil spill, the droplets weather down and degrade due to continuous exposure to sunlight and oxygen – this weathering process is known as photo-oxidation. This further results in the degradation of crude oil into other carbon-based by-products over time.

One such example of the by-product is tar, which is used for laying asphalt roads. It is a product of this same degradation process. However, tar generated from such a process can remain in coastal areas for decades after a spill.

The researchers from the UM Rosenstiel School first presented their findings in a report published in the journal Frontiers in Marine Science, titled ‘A Coupled Lagrangian-Earth System Model for Predicting Oil Photooxidation.’ The team, in order to understand how sunlight degrades oil, developed the first oil-spill model algorithm that can track the dose of solar radiation in oil droplets as they rise from deep-sea and up to the ocean surface.

The research team found that the weathering oil droplets due to solar exposure occurred within hours to days. Furthermore, roughly 75 per cent of the photo-oxidation during the Deepwater Horizon oil spill happened in the same areas where chemical dispersants were sprayed aerially. Photo-oxidized oil is known to reduce the effectiveness of aerial dispersants due to the presence of hydrocarbon products.

According to Claire Paris, UM Rosenstiel School faculty and senior author of the study, it is crucial to understand the ‘timing’ and ‘location’ of this weathering process. “It helps in directing efforts and resources on fresh oil while avoiding stressing the environment with chemical dispersants on oil that cannot be dispersed,” Paris added.

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Best from science journals: Catnip as insect repellent

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Here are some of the most interesting research papers to have appeared in top science journals last week.

(Subscribe to Science For All, our weekly newsletter, where we aim to take the jargon out of science and put the fun in. Click here.)

Multipurpose herb

Published in Current Biology

Catnip (Nepeta cataria), a garden herb known for its hallucinogenic effects on domestic cats, is also used to ward off insects, especially mosquitoes. A new study has now decoded how the plant does this. The researchers found that Catnip and its active ingredient Nepetalactone activates an irritant receptor called TRPA1.

Welcome to Bahamas

Published in PNAS

Who were the original inhabitants of the picturesque Bahamas? When did they arrive? A detailed study of the fire and vegetation (of the last 3,000 years) showed that indigenous people called Lucayans arrival in the northern Bahamas at around 830 CE. “While people were present in Florida more than 14,000 years ago at the end of the last ice age, these people never crossed the Florida Straits to nearby Bahamian islands, only 80 to 105 km away…Meanwhile, the Caribbean islands were populated by people migrating from South American northward,” explains Peter van Hengstum, one of the authors in a release.

Blackwood Sinkhole and key localities for inferring Lucayan migration patterns through The Bahamas. Credit: Fall et al., doi:10.1073/pnas.2015764118.

Blackwood Sinkhole and key localities for inferring Lucayan migration patterns through The Bahamas. Credit: Fall et al., doi:10.1073/pnas.2015764118.
 

 

Frogs and noise-cancellation

Published in Current Biology

To find a suitable partner, male frogs sit in one place and call loudly. But how does the female hear and select the male of her species among all the other background noise and overlapping calls of other frog species? Their lungs act as noise-canceling headphones says a new study. The lungs when inflated were found to reduce their eardrum’s sensitivity to noise in a particular frequency range, making it easier to hear their mate’s calls.

Rocky super-Earth

Published in Science

Artistic impression of the surface of the newly discovered planet Gliese486b. Credit: RenderArea. https://www.uni-heidelberg.de/

Artistic impression of the surface of the newly discovered planet Gliese486b. Credit: RenderArea. https://www.uni-heidelberg.de/
 

 

Meet Gliese 486 b, a new exoplanet found orbiting the red dwarf star Gliese 486. The exoplanet is 2.81 Earth masses, 1.31 Earth radii and is a Super-Earth (exoplanet larger than Earth and smaller than Neptune). “The gravity is also 70% stronger than on Earth, making it harder to walk and jump. Someone who weighed 50 kg on Earth would feel like they weighed 85 kg on Gliese 486b, explains astronomer José Antonio Caballero in a release.

Oil spill cleaner

Published in Advanced Materials

A new resin membrane could soon help clean up beaches contaminated with oil spills. Named SAVER (superamphiphilic vitrimer epoxy resin) membranes, they can separate oil and water efficiently. The paper reports that it is similar to classical epoxy resins and “the blocked membrane can be easily recovered when contaminated…recycled, and re‐used.”

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