Effects of Crude and Diesel Oil Spills on Plant Communities at Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, and the Derivation of Oil Spill Sensitivity Maps

Authors

  • D.A. Walker
  • P.J. Webber
  • K.R. Everett
  • J. Brown

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14430/arctic2656

Keywords:

Diesel fuels, Environmental impacts, Maps, Oil spills on land, Crude oil, Plant distribution, Prudhoe Bay region, Alaska

Abstract

Crude oil was spilled on six of the major Prudhoe Bay plant communities at an intensity of 12 l/m². The communities occurred along a topographic-moisture gradient. The reaction of the major species of the various communities was recorded one year following the spills. Sedges and willows showed substantial recovery from crude oil spills. Mosses, lichens, and most dicotyledons showed little or no recovery. On a very wet plot with standing water, the vegetation showed total recovery one year following the spill. Dry plots, on the other hand, showed very poor recovery. Dryas integrifolia M. Vahl, the most important vascular species on dry sites, was killed. Identical experiments using diesel oil rather than crude oil showed all species except an aquatic moss to be killed. A sensitivity index for the communities was calculated on the basis of the percentage cover of the resistant species divided by the original total plant cover of the community. With this information an oil spill sensitivity map for an area of Prudhoe Bay was constructed using a vegetation map as a base. Using the crude oil data from Prudhoe Bay together with some from the literature, a predictive sensitivity map was also constructed for an accidental crude oil spill at nearby Franklin Bluffs. In this example all the community types are considered to have moderate to excellent recovery potential. Implications of the experiments and the mapping exercises for oil spill contingency planning are discussed.

Downloads

Published

1978-01-01