The Physical, Chemical, and Biological Effects of Crude Oil Spills after 15 Years on a Black Spruce Forest, Interior Alaska

Authors

  • Charles M. Collins
  • Charles H. Racine
  • Marianne E. Walsh

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14430/arctic1286

Keywords:

Black spruces, Environmental impacts, Frozen ground, Oil spills on land, Soil percolation, Soil profiles, Thawing, Plant cover, Thaw settlement, Active layer, Caribou Creek (65 09 N, 147 29 W), Alaska, Poker Creek (65 08 N, 147 28 W)

Abstract

The effects of two large experimental crude oil spills conducted in the winter and summer of 1976 in a permafrost-underlain black spruce forest of interior Alaska were assessed 15 years after the spills. Effects on permafrost, as determined from measurements of active layer thaw depths and of the total amount of ground subsidence, were far more pronounced on the winter spill due to a larger surface-oiled area. The winter spill also had a more drastic effect on the vegetation. Where the black, asphalt-like surface oil was present, black spruce mortality was 100% and there was very little live plant cover except for cotton grass tussocks. Changes in oil chemistry varied with depth; surface samples had signs of microbiological degradation, whereas some subsurface samples taken just above the permafrost had no evidence of degradation and still contained volatile fractions.

Key words: crude oil, spill, terrestrial, taiga, permafrost, black spruce forest, interior Alaska

Downloads

Published

1994-01-01