Determining
Marine
Biodegradation Kinetics of Chemicals
Discharged from Offshore Oil PlatformsWhole Mixture Testing
at High Dilutions Increases Environmental Relevance
Posted on 2024-09-18 - 17:33
Offshore
oil platforms discharge enormous volumes of
produced water
that contain mixtures of petrochemicals and production chemicals.
It is crucial to avoid the discharge of particularly those chemicals
that are persistent in the marine environment. This study aims to
(1) develop a biodegradation testing approach for discharged chemicals
by native marine microorganism, (2) determine how dilution affects
biodegradation, and (3) determine biodegradation kinetics for many
discharged chemicals at low and noninhibitory concentrations. Produced
water from an offshore oil platform was diluted in the ratio of 1:20,
1:60, and 1:200 in seawater from the same location and incubated for
60 days at 10 °C. Automated solid-phase microextraction GC-MS
was used as a sensitive analytical technique, and chemical-specific
primary degradation was determined based on peak area ratios between
biotic test systems and abiotic controls. Biodegradation was inhibited
at lower dilutions, consistent with ecotoxicity tests. Biodegradation
kinetics were determined at the highest dilution for 139 chemicals
(43 tentatively identified), and 6 chemicals were found persistent
(half-life >60 days). Nontargeted analysis by liquid chromatography-high-resolution
MS was demonstrated as a proof-of-principle for a comprehensive assessment.
Biodegradation testing of chemicals in discharges provides the possibility
to assess hundreds of chemicals at once and find the persistent ones.
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Møller, Mette
T.; Birch, Heidi; Sjøholm, Karina K.; Skjolding, Lars M.; Xie, Hongyu; Papazian, Stefano; et al. (2024). Determining
Marine
Biodegradation Kinetics of Chemicals
Discharged from Offshore Oil PlatformsWhole Mixture Testing
at High Dilutions Increases Environmental Relevance. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.4c05692