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Summary results from a pilot study conducted around an oil production platform on the northwest shelf of Australia

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 02:19 authored by Susan King, Johanna Johnson, Mary Haasch, Daniel Ryan, Jorma Ahokas, Kathryn Burns
The Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) conducted a pilot study around the Harriet A oil production platform oil the Northwest Shelf of Australia. We evaluated hepatic ethoxyresorufin-O-deethylse (EROD) activity, fluorescent aromatic compounds (FACs) in bile and immunodetection of CYP1A-like proteins in two Australian tropical fish species, Gold-Spotted Trevally (Carangoides fulvoguttatus) and Bar-Cheeked Coral Trout (Plectropomus maculalus) to assess exposure to petroleum hydrocarbons associated with produced formation water (PFW). Additionally, the incidence of hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria isolated from the liver and bile of all fish captured was examined. Low EROD activity was found in both species, with EROD activity in C fulvoguttatus showing significant site differences. FACs and CYP1A protein levels in C. fulvoguttatus showed a clear trend in hydrocarbon exposure consistent with hydrocarbon chemistry data: Harriet A > Harriet C > reference site. P. maculatus showed elevated levels of FACs at Harriet A as compared to the reference site and demonstrated detectable levels of CYP1A-like proteins at these two sites. Hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria were found in the liver and bile of both species, yet there was no correlation by sites. Our results demonstrate that C fulvoguttatus and P. maculatus have potential as indicator species for assessing the effects from exposure to petroleum hydrocarbons. Both FACs and CYP1A Lire providing warning signs that there is potential for biological effects oil fish populations exposed to PFW around the Harriet A production platform.

History

Journal

Marine Pollution Bulletin

Volume

50

Start page

1163

End page

1172

Total pages

10

Publisher

Pergamon

Place published

England

Language

English

Copyright

© 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Former Identifier

2005001157

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2009-02-27

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