xvEPA
                          Office of Research
                          and Development
                          Washington, DC 20460
                          EPA 600/9-79-007
                          March 1979
Decision Series
             A Small Oil Spill
             at West Falmouth
                                \ /

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The Energy/

Environment  R&D

Decision Series

  Some of the most basic problems
facing our society today involve the use
of our energy resources and the effects
of this usage on our environment.
These problems affect everyone, and
everyone has an interest in their resolu-
tion. But the technical aspects of these
problems make it difficult for a major
portion of the interested public to
understand and participate in the
decision-making process. This volume
contributes to the bridging of this infor-
mation gap.
  The Energy/Environment R&D
Decision Series was inaugurated late in
1976. The series presents, in an easily
understood and informative manner,
selected key issues and findings of the
Federal Interagency Energy/Environment
Research and Development Program,
which was initiated in fiscal year 1975.
Planned and coordinated by the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA),
the Interagency Program sponsors
more than 1,000 research projects
ranging from the analysis of health and
environmental effects of energy
systems to the development of pollu-
tion control technologies.
  If you have any comments, please
write to Editor, RD-681, US EPA,
Washington, D.C. 20460. This docu-
ment is available through the National
Technical  Information Service, Spring-
field, Virginia 22161. Mention of trade
names and commercial products herein
does not constitute EPA endorsement
or recommendation for use.
Editor: Francine Sakin Jacoff
Text: Dr. William Conner
Technical Review:
  Dr. Paul Lefcourt,  Environmental
   Protection Agency
  Dr. Donald Rhoads, Yale University
  Dr. Howard Sanders, Woods Hole
   Oceanographic Institution
Graphics: Craig R. Keith;
         Vincent Maiello

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  Site of Oil Spill
                                          West Falmouth Harbor
                                                             ,»••*»
The West
Fa/mouth Spill
"The West Fa/mouth spill was
not large, but its effects were
catastrophic and long lasting. "
Sanders, H.L. 1974. "The West
Fa/mouth Saga."New Engineer.
Cape Cod Bay
   Nantucket
   Sound

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Preface
  This is a report about oil and its ef-
fects in marine environments, a techni-
cally complex subject that is further
shrouded by controversy between con-
flicting interests. This report focuses on
an investigation of a modest oil spill
which occurred at West Falmouth,
Massachusetts in September, 1969.
The West Falmouth study was con-
ducted by Dr. Howard Sanders, the
late Dr. Max Blumer, and their col-
leagues from the Woods Hole Oceano-
graphic Institution.  Substantially
supported by EPA's Office of Research
and Development, the work of Dr.
Sanders and his associates comprises
what is probably the most rigorous and
comprehensive investigation ever made
of a single spill event. The West
Falmouth study provides a solid ad-
vance in the understanding of oil pollu-
tion in the ocean, and its effects on
coastal areas.
    '

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I
     ean
  "Oil. Essential for energy ...
  And a major threat to the
  ocean ecology." from Lietzell,
  T.L. 1977. Marine Technology
  Society Journal 71:1. '
                                   't-
                                                      »•
                                                      It «W V-9  *
                                             I

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Normal or
Operational
Inputs
,__,..  ^fy>H|.y  *t,
United States Sources of Petroleum Inputs to the Marine Environment
Source of Oil
Offshore Production
Normal Operations
Accidents
Subtotal
Tankers
Normal Operations
Accidents
Subtotal
Non-Tankers
Bilges Bunkering
Accidents
Subtotal
Coastal Refineries
Coastal Municipal Waste
Non-Refinery Industrial Waste
Urban Runoff
River Runoff
Atmosphere
Natural Seeps
Total
Thousand Metric
Tons Per Year
3
10
13
209
30
239
78
20
98
30
100
100
100
530
180
120
1,510
Percent of
Total
0.2
0.7
0.9
13.8
2.0
15.8
5.2
1.3
6.5
2.0
6.6
6.6
6.6
35.1
11.9
8.0
100.0
Source: National Academy of Sciences, 1974. Petroleum in the marine environment: Inputs,
       techniques for analysis, fates and effects. Ocean Affairs Board, NAS, Washington, D.C.

  Although less than 3% of all oil entering the marine environment results from tanker and off-
shore production accidents, oil spills are unique because they create high concentrations of oil
in the environment, and therefore pose a special kind of environmental threat.
How Does  Oil Get

into the Oceans?

  It is estimated that more than
1.5 million metric tons* of oil or
petroleum products enter United States
coastal waters each year. The bulk of
these inputs result from human  activi-
ties,  mostly from urban and  river runoff
(42%), and normal tanker operations
which include cleaning tanks and
ballasting (14%). Although less  than
3% of the oil enters coastal  waters
because of tanker  and offshore  produc-
tion  accidents, such oil spills are impor-
tant  because they  create  higher con-
centrations of oil than do most  other
sources of oil pollution, and, therefore,
pose a special kind of environmental
threat.
  An oil spill can happen whenever oil
is transported, stored, handled or ex-
tracted from the earth. About 10,000
oil spills totalling 10 to 20 million
gallons of oil can be expected in or
near the territorial  waters of the United
States every year. However, the annual
amounts of spillage are variable and
dependent on the frequency of major
oil spill  disasters. A single accident in-
volving a supertanker could  spill more
oil than the total annual spillage into all
U.S. waters. The Amoco Cadiz, for ex-
ample,  lost over 60 million gallons of oil
when it broke up off the coast of
France  in March of 1978. In U.S.
waters, spilled oil is more frequently a
problem in the Atlantic Ocean and the
Gulf of Mexico than in the  Pacific
Ocean. A large portion of the spilled oil
enters near-shore  areas where winds
and  currents may  transport the oil to
pollution sensitive  river outlets and bay
areas (estuaries), tidal flats and
marshes.

*0ne metric ton equals about  7 barrels.
 One barrel equals 42  U. S. gallons.

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 Amounts of Oil Spilled
                                    Gallons of oil
                                       discharged
Number of
discharges
Source: USCG. Polluting Incidents in and
around US Coastal Waters. 1975, 1976.
CG-487.
 Location of Oil Spills (1976)
Open Internal
Waters,  ^
0.5%   XPorts and
          \Harbors
Great Lakes
   3.1%    Pacific
            5.3%
                        Beaches
                     Non-navigable
                        Waters
                        38.3%
   Open Coastal
      Waters
      35.6%
Source: USCG. Polluting Incidents in and
around US Coastal Waters. 1975, 1976.
CG-487.

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Area of Comparison

Location of Spill
Cargo
Size of Spill
Shoreline Contaminated
Waterfowl Killed
Total Cost of Lost
   Waterfowl (based on
   monetary value assigned
   to lost  species)
Argo Merchant

Atlantic Ocean
No. 6 Oil
7,500,000 gals.
None
540

$5,535
Barge (STC-101)

Chesapeake Bay
No. 6 Oil
250,000 gals.
27 miles
31,000

$635,325
Source: Total Costs Resulting from Two Major Oil Spills. 1977. CED-77-71.
What  Are The

Effects of

Oil Spills?

  Each spill is a unique event, with a
number of factors interacting to deter-
mine the effects of a specific spill. For
example, two spills that occurred in
1976 have been compared by the
Comptroller General of the United
States. The Argo Merchant went
aground on shoals 30 miles southeast
of Nantucket, while the Barge
(STC-101) was grounded 4 miles off-
shore near the mouth of the Potomac
River.
  Even though the Argo Merchant spill
was more extensive, spilling thirty times
more oil, the impact was greater on the
Chesapeake Bay as  waterfowl were
flocking in great numbers during
seasonal migrations. Because the bay
enclosed and retained the oil, the effect
was prolonged and magnified. These
effects illustrate the difficulty of predict-
ing, except in a general way, what the
exact environmental impact of a given
spill will be. The type and amount of
oil spilled, the weather and the direc-
tion of ocean currents, the coastal
areas and organisms impacted, the
season, and the effect of cleanup at-
tempts each play a role in determining
the impact of an oil spill. Previous ex-
posure of marine plants and animals,
and their environment to spilled oil may
alter the sensitivity of such an
ecosystem  to additional spills. The
significant environmental effects of
spilled oil, which result from oil toxicity
and physical coating, range from direct
kills of fish and wildlife to more insid-
ious sublethal effects such as reducing
the ability of organisms to reproduce or
to follow normal behavior patterns.
   In the case of the 1969 West
Falmouth spill, very sensitive habitats
and organisms were exposed to oil.
The spill was of moderate size, about
175,000 gallons, but the highly toxic
No. 2 fuel oil contaminated the local
estuary and marshes and caused sig-
nificant losses to commercial fisheries
and serious long-term damage to the
marine ecosystem in the West
Falmouth area.

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The West Fa/mouth

Spill

"It was John L. R. French . . .
who first called the Coast Guard.
He was awakened about 12:30
a.m. by the stench of oil. Like
others, he thought first it was
from his own oil burner." from
The Falmouth Enterprise,
September 16, 1969.


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What  Happened at

West  Falmouth?

  On the evening of September 15,
1969, a tug pulling a barge out of
Tiverton, Rhode Island, had started up
Buzzard's Bay bound for a power plant
on the Cape Cod Canal. During the
night, the radar failed and the towline
broke. In the fog, the barge Florida
went aground  on submerged  boulders
near the mouth of West Falmouth
Harbor. The Florida was damaged and
leaking her  2500 ton cargo of No. 2
fuel oil into the waters of West
Falmouth. Before the barge could be
lightened and freed from the rocks,
about 550 tons or 175,000 gallons of
the light refined oil were lost.
  In the water, the oil formed a coffee
colored emulsion of water and oil  that
was visible for several miles. The slick
was driven  north-northeast by strong
winds toward Wild Harbor. Efforts at
containing or otherwise mitigating the
impact of the spilled oil included the
use of booms or floating barriers,  and
two types of chemical dispersants to
break up the oil. These efforts had little
or no effect on the movement and im-
pact of the  spilled oil. Miles of beach
were littered with windrows of dying,
dead, and decaying marine organisms.
With each tide, the windrows were
replenished  with more casualties of
scallops, lobsters, finfish, marine
worms, and various other marine
organisms.  The oil had obviously im-
pacted the marshes and tidal areas of
Wild Harbor.
  At the time, the event attracted little
national attention. The spill was not
large and some oil spill professionals,
such as the president of the cleanup
company, predicted a full recovery in
four to six weeks. However, Town of
Falmouth Shellfish Constable  George
Souza knew that the problem was
more serious. Mr. Souza made a per-
sonal survey of the local beaches,
marshes and waters. He estimated the
immediate loss to the local shellfishing
industry to be $250,000. Mr. Souza's
estimate included only the immediate
mortality of scallops and soft-shell
clams. He did not consider the loss to
other commercial fisheries products
such as lobsters, finfish and hard-shell
clams (quahogs), nor the secondary
impacts to fish processing, transport-
ing, wholesaling and retailing industries
that would be experienced in years to
come.
  Principal Falmouth shellfishing areas
were closed for several years following
the spill. Shellfishing in the Wild Har-
bor Basin and Wild Harbor River is still
restricted today, ten years after the
spill. Because of the severe local
economic impact of the spill, the Town
of Falmouth  and the State of
Massachusetts filed suit against the
owner of the Florida. In an out-of-court
settlement, the Town of Falmouth
received $100,000 and the State of
Massachusetts received $200,000 in
payment of damages.
What About

Scientific Studies?

  It is relatively easy to estimate the
dollar impact of the West Falmouth
spill on local fisheries. It is a much
more difficult matter to document, in-
terpret and understand the immediate
and long-term impacts of the spill to
the ecosystems of the West Falmouth
area. The spill occurred only a few
miles from the Woods Hole Oceano-
graphic Institution and the Woods Hole
Marine Biological Laboratory which are
among the most respected oceano-
graphic research centers in the world.
The chance proximity of the spill site to
Woods Hole provided an excellent op-
portunity for a scientifically rigorous
documentation and analysis of the ef-
fects of a single oil spill event. This is
precisely what the Woods Hole re-
searchers,  led by Dr. Howard Sanders,
Mr. George Hampson and Dr. Max
Blumer, set out to do. Through the
years, twelve scientific investigators
have examined different aspects of the
West Falmouth spill. Research efforts
have included chemical analyses, sedi-
ment analyses, long-term  studies of
benthic (bottom-dwelling) organisms,
studies of  the marsh ecosystems and
detailed investigations of the biology of
fiddler crabs and killifish of Wild  Harbor
marsh. Taken together, these studies
provide a detailed account of the ef-
fects of the West Falmouth spill, mak-
ing it the most studied and best
understood oil spill to date.

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                                                                                Why  Trace
                                                                                Spilled  Oil?
                                         Gas Chromatography
                                          Gas chromatography is an analytical tool
                                         used to analyze petroleum hydrocarbons. This
                                         technique separates the various constituent
                                         hydrocarbon compounds according to the size
                                         and structure of their molecules. The oil which
                                         is in a sample, such as sediment or tissue, is
                                         extracted with a solvent that isolates the
                                         hydrocarbons. Each component or fraction of
                                         these hydrocarbons can then be separated and
                                         measured. As different fractions emerge from
                                         the separation process, a recorder graphs the
                                         amounts of hydrocarbon, forming a pattern or
                                         chromatogram. This chromatogram is a sort of
                                         "fingerprint" which identifies and distinguishes
                                         between different types of oil.
                                                                    Reports from the West Falmouth
                                                                 area suggested that everything was
                                                                 back to normal shortly after the
                                                                 cleanup operations were terminated.
                                                                 Bathers were enjoying the water, and
                                                                 the beaches were as beautiful as
                                                                 ever. These  reports were misleading.
                                                                 When  spilled oil can no longer be
                                                                 seen, it does not mean that the oil, at
                                                                 toxic levels,  is not present. Oil  can be
                                                                 lethal or have significant sublethal ef-
                                                                 fects in very small concentrations,
                                                                 concentrations as low as several parts
                                                                 per billion.
                                                                    Sensitive analytical techniques can
                                                                 detect these very small, but impor-
                                                                 tant, concentrations of oil.  The
                                                                 techniques of analytical chemistry can
                                                                 also differentiate between hydro-
                                                                 carbons from petroleum and the
                                                                 naturally occurring or biogenic hydro-
                                                                 carbons that are present in all living
                                                                 things. One  analytical technique, gas
                                                                 chromatography, can even distinguish
                                                                 between different types of oil.
                                                                 Analytical  chemistry provides the
                                                                 tools used to trace oil as it disperses
                                                                 into the environment, to monitor
                                                                 changes in the oil that occur as a
                                                                 result of weathering, and to relate
                                                                 this information to biological surveys
                                                                 and studies of organisms.
 -A-
                                                               B
 100
150           200          250
        Temperature (°C)
                                                        300   100
150          200           250
       Temperature (C°)
300
Gas chromatogram "fingerprint" of fresh No. 5 fuel oil (A) and the same* oil after weathering for 41/2 months (B).
Source: Cretney, W.J. et al.,1978. Long Term
Fate of Heavy Fuel Oil in a Spill-
Contaminated B.C. Coastal Bay. Journal of
Fisheries Research Board of Canada. 35, (5).
                                                                                                                   11

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12

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                 1240
                                        Hydrocarbon levels in the sediment.
mg HC/
100g sediment
         1969
                               1970
                                                               1971
Where  Did the

Oil Go?

  Once released into the water, the
fate of the No. 2 fuel oil from the
Florida was dictated by the physical,
chemical and biological characteristics
of the ecosystem. Initially the oil was
blown to the  north-northeast and a
large amount was incorporated into the
sediments of  the heavily oiled subtidal
area. Other subtidal areas were moder-
ately or lightly oiled. Fuel oil was also
found in the marshes of the Wild Harbor
River. In the weeks following the spill,
the No. 2 fuel oil continued to disperse.
Some sampling sites that were chemi-
cally and biologically "normal" im-
mediately  after the spill were found to
be contaminated one to three months
later. During the chemical monitoring,
all polluting hydrocarbons were very
similar, by "fingerprint," to the oil
carried by the Florida.  By the spring of
1970, the subtidal polluted area was ten
times larger than immediately after the
spill, covering 5,000 acres. At that time
500 acres  of marsh and river were also
polluted.
                                         Moderately Oiled Offshore
          1969
                                1970
                                                               1971
                                         Oiled Marsh
         1969
                                1970
                                                                1971
                                         Offshore Control
          1969
                                1970
                                                                1971
                                                                                Source: Sanders, H.L., et al. IN PRESS.
                                                                                Anatomy of an Oil Spill: The West Falmouth
                                                                                Study. (Submitted to EPA)
                                                                                                                   13

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"Fingerprints" of Sediment Oil
                                           Wild Harbor,
                                           May 1974
                                           No. 2 fuel oil
                                        Falmouth Harbor,
                                        June 1974
Source: (A) Sanders, H.L., et al., IN PRESS. Anatomy of an Oil Spill: The
West Falmouth Study (submitted to EPA). (B,C, D) Michael, A.D., C.R.
Van Raalte and L.S. Brown. 1975. Long-Term Effects of an Oil Spill at
West Falmouth, Massachusetts. Proceedings of Conference on  Prevention
and Control of Oil Polution. API.

   Gas chromatography shows that the hydrocarbons in
the sediment at Wild Harbor were more similar to No. 2
fuel oil than to hydrocarbons commonly found in nearby
Falmouth Harbor.
How  Persistent

Was  the  Oil?

  At West Falmouth, the spilled oil
has persisted for over ten years. Even
today,  relatively fresh No. 2 fuel oil
can be found in the marshes of Wild
Harbor. In general, hydrocarbon
levels in the  sediments of oiled sta-
tions have tended to decrease slowly
over time. The major processes
responsible for this decrease are
dissolution, or dissolving into the
water,  and biodegradation, which is
breaking down of matter by living
organisms.
  Once in the environment, oil may
be redistributed,  dispersed or concen-
trated as time passes. For example, in
March  1970 there was a dramatic in-
crease  in the amount of sediment oil
at the heavily oiled Wild Harbor
sampling station. The "fingerprint"
technique showed that the hydro-
carbons in Wild Harbor sediments,  as
late as 1974, were more similar to
those of No. 2 fuel oil than to the
hydrocarbons found in the sediments
of Falmouth, a nearby polluted har-
bor.  The source  of this oil is thought
to be the sponge-like marshes of the
Wild Harbor River, where the original
No. 2 fuel oil is still leaching out.
  Organisms within the ecosystem
absorb, ingest, accumulate, and
distribute  petroleum hydrocarbons.
Woods Hole researchers K.A. Burns
and J.M. Teal found traces of
polluting hydrocarbons in the plants
and animals  of Wild Harbor marshes
twelve to  eighteen months after the
West Falmouth spill. The lingering
residue of No. 2 fuel oil was found in
birds, algae, marsh grass, mussels,
and fish from the Wild  Harbor River
area, but samples from the nearby
Sippewissett Marsh control station
were uncontaminated.
 14

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Collected about six months after the spiff, these musse/s demonstrate some sublethal effects of the
West Fa/mouth oil spiff. The Wild Harbor musse/s on the left are emaciated compared to the healthy
mussels from nearby Sippewissett Marsh which are plump with eggs and sperm.
Where  is the

West Falmouth

Oil  Today?

  Oil is a complex mixture of slowly
degrading hydrocarbons. The degrada-
tion of oil is especially slow in environ-
ments such as mud flats, marshes and
muddy bottom sediments. The West
Falmouth studies show that in areas
where heavy oiling occurred, chronic
oil pollution has lasted for years.
  Although techniques of analytical
chemistry have documented the fate of
the oil spilled  by the Florida, the key to
further understanding of the impact of
the spill is in looking at the biological
effects.

Fate of Oil
• Heavy oiling occurred at subtidal
  and intertidal areas.
• Plants and animals were contam-
  inated with No. 2 fuel oil.
• The No. 2 fuel oil persisted for
  years after the spill, clearly
  refuting the frequently stated as-
  sumption that all light oils are
  quickly dissipated in the environ-
  ment.
• Heavy oiled areas served as
  sources of low level chronic oil
  repollution: a single spill can
  cause a chronic oil pollution
  problem.
                                                                                                            15

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Effectsj)f
"The effects «£ the spill wefS    » • ,•
                    A^L*      •   f
ca tastrophic and Hhg-fajjilngi -^  * *^.
the*region jftmaximum impvc\^  9**\
alm(& tfftSHf* eradicated . . . At
the heavily oiled . .  . areas of
Wild.mrbor the»bmtogical
vacuum was fiffecf^tt^the classic
maeiQe opportunist  Capitella
caj^ffltM,  r.t      Sanders.
       New Engineer.
   F •  »~
   •*i
I**-2E~
  %    -*
                          '<•
              - g»-j

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What  Kind  of
Research Was
Done?
  The researchers at the Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution were
presented with the problem of develop-
ing an experimental design that would
best document the effects of the West
Falmouth spill on benthic (bottom-
dwelling) communities of marine
animals, whether the effects were
gross, subtle  or non-existent. This
involved deciding where, when and
how bottom samples would be taken,
processed  and analyzed. The major
factors considered in making these
decisions were the distribution of the
oil, the expected  rates of change in the
benthic communities, and the state-
of-the-art of  benthic sampling and
sample processing.
Sampling Methods
Where — Chemical analysis of bottom samples
was used to determine where biological samples
would be taken. The aim was to sample heavily
oiled, moderately oiled and lightly oiled or con-
trol stations. This allowed comparison of com-
munity response to different levels of pollution.
Two types of communities were sampled, the in-
tertidal marsh and the subtidal offshore. Sedi-
ment types found at sampling stations were
compared to ensure that subtidal stations
represented the same basic bottom community
type.
When — Deciding when and how frequently  to
sample is difficult. Seasonal and spatial dif-
ferences in  normal benthic communities are con-
siderable, and communities under stress may
vary even more dramatically. On the other hand,
to acquire and  process benthic samples is time
consuming and costly. Sampling was initiated
immediately after the spill, and it was decided to
sample frequently, every month when possible.
As time passed the frequency of sampling
decreased somewhat.
How — Bottom samples were collected with a
hand-held coring device at the intertidal marsh
stations, and with a remote operated grab at the
subtidal stations. A small portion of each sample
was frozen and stored for chemical analysis. The
biological samples were washed using a fine
sieve, and the material retained on the sieve, in-
cluding the animals, was placed in a preservative
solution. In the laboratory, the animals were
sorted from the debris using a microscope; iden-
tified and counted. The data analysis ranged
from simple tallies of species and  individuals to
various statistical characterizations of the
benthic communities.

                                                                                                                          17

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Why Study  Benthic

Communities?
  Most people don't have any direct
contact with the abundant but small
organisms that live in marine bottom
sediments. Therefore, it may be diffi-
cult to appreciate the importance of
benthic communities even though we
are all familiar with some  of the larger
bottom-dwellers such as the crabs,
lobsters, clams and shrimp that are
commonly enjoyed seafood items.  But
close study shows that ecosystems, in-
cluding those of the benthos, are com-
plex.  The existence of one component
of this system, such as crabs, depends
on the normal functioning of all
ecosystem components from bacteria
to top predators such as striped bass.
Many delicately balanced  variables
create an intricate marine ecosystem in
which each component has some in-
fluence on all the others.
  And so benthic communities are closely
studied because the stationary lifestyle of
such organisms makes them good pollu-
tion indicators, and because benthic
communities play an essential role in
the functioning  of the ocean ecosystem.
Importance of
Benthic Communities
Food Web Functions - One phenomenon ob-
served in ecosystems is the transfer of energy
up the food web, from plants to plant eaters or
herbivores, to predators. Benthic organisms
have a critical role in the transfer of energy to
fish species, especially juveniles, the young of
the species, and bottom feeding fish. Some
benthic organisms concentrate food and energy
from the water column by filtering  out minute
plants and animals. Others ingest sediment, in
order to digest out the myriad microorganisms
that in turn survive by breaking down dead plant
and animal matter. Thus the benthic community
might be thought of as an array of energy
packets distributed at different sediment depths
and available in different sizes and  types. These
energy packets may be grazed upon by a variety
of finfish and shellfish, many of which are com-
mercially important species.
Provision of Habitat - A structured or shelter-
ing habitat is needed by many marine animals.
The plants found in marshes and grass beds,
which are associated with near-shore benthic
communities, provide the habitat that helps
make these areas so highly  productive. These
plants supply protected spawning areas, hiding
places for small fish, and points of attachment
for a host of sessile or attached marine species
that are low in the  food web, such as barnacles.
This promotes the  use of marshes and grass
beds as nursery areas for many marine animals,
including off-shore and commercially important
species.
Lack of Motility - Many benthic organisms
cannot relocate.  Once the free-swimming larvae
settle out of the water column and change into
adults, they stay in the same location for the re-
mainder of  their  existence. Although some ben-
thic organisms are  capable of relocating, for
most it  is a slow, poorly  directed process, not at
all comparable to the motility enjoyed by finfish.
 18

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Immediate Effects on Marine Communities
                Control Station
                October 16, 1969  Moderately Oiled
                               Station
                               September 22, 1969
Number
  of
Species
 Number
   of
Individuals
(per square
meter)
                                                       Heavily Oiled Station
                                                       September 25, 1969
Source: Sanders, H.L., et al. IN PRESS.
Anatomy of an Oil Spill: The West Falmouth
Study. (Submitted to EPA)
What  Were the

Immediate Effects

of the Oil  Spill?

  Initial observations and samples
taken soon after the West Falmouth
spill revealed mass mortality in the ben-
thic communities. Bottom dwelling
species such as the lobster,  tomcod
and scup washed up on the beaches,
indicating that subtidal benthic com-
munities had been impacted. To con-
firm this, the researchers trawled the
bottom off New Silver Beach in about
ten feet of water. The results of the
trawl were dramatic.  The catch con-
sisted of several species of fish,
worms, crustaceans and other marine
invertebrates. About 95% of the
animals were dead, the rest, dying.
The results of this and similar observa-
tions prompted  the initiation of a com-
prehensive study of the effects of the
West Falmouth spill  on the benthos.
  The initial samples clearly demon-
strated the severity of the spill impact.
Compared to control areas,  oiled areas
were reduced in both numbers of
species and densities of benthic
animals. This was true for both off-
shore and marsh sampling sites.  When-
ever oil was found in the sediment,
there was mortality.  The greater the
concentration of oil, the greater was
the observed mortality.  Shortly after
the initial impact, an opportunistic or
"weed" species of worm called
Capitella capitata underwent an im-
pressive population explosion.  Like
weeds on a cleared lot, the  prolific and
resistant worm species took advantage
of the biological void created by the
spill at heavily oiled stations. In
February 1970, 99% of the individuals
at marsh Station IV  were Capitella as
compared with  the finding of no
Capitella at a similar non-oiled site
nearby.
                                                                                                               19

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 How Did
 the Benthic
 Communities Recover?
   For years after the initial mortality,
 the benthic communities were in
 various stages of recovery. While
 recovering, the communities were
 characterized  by reduced numbers of
 species, and several abnormal varia-
 tions in community structure. From
 chemical monitoring, it was apparent
 that, in many cases, the capacity of
 the community to recover was com-
 promised by the repollution, multiple
 exposures, and persistence of the
 No.  2 fuel oil  in the environment.
                      The communities that were recover-
                    ing after oiling showed many basic dif-
                    ferences when compared to normal
                    benthic  communities which were repre-
                    sented by control stations.
                      In light of this evidence, there is no
                    question that the normal functioning of
                    benthic  communities was profoundly
                    affected for years after the West
                    Falmouth spill.
 Stages of Recovery-
 Number of Bottom Dwelling Species
 80
                                    Heavily Oiled Station
   1969
1970
1971

Moderately Oiled Station
                  Recovery of Affected
                  Communities
                  • Smaller numbers of species.
                  • Community dominance by oppor-
                   tunistic species.
                  • Increased fluctuation, over time,
                   in the numbers of benthic
                   organisms making up the com-
                   munity.
                  • Greater variation, over time, in the
                   species composition of the
                   recovering community.
   1969
1970
  1971
Source: Sanders, H.L., et at., IN PRESS. Anatomy of an Oil Spill:
      The West Falmouth Study. Draft Submitted to EPA.
      pp. 85, 86, 87.
20

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 Domination of Weed Species  —
 Percentage of Capitella in Community
80-

60-

40-

20-
80i

60-

40-

20-
                                              Heavily Oiled Offshore Station
    1969
                      1970
   1971


Oiled Marsh Station
    1969
                      1970
   1971
Source: Sanders, H.L., et al., IN PRESS. Anatomy of an Oil Spill:
        The West Falmouth Study. Draft Submitted to EPA.
        pp. 85, 86, 87.
Nature of Recovering Communities
Numbers of Species - The heavily oiled sta-
tion showed a greatly reduced number of
species for at least two years after the spill and
subsequent studies showed significantly reduced
numbers of species for years afterwards. In addi-
tion, the number of species was much more
variable through time at the oiled stations than
at the offshore control station.
Opportunistic Species - In the first year after
the spill, the opportunistic worm Capitella
capitata exploited the biological  vacuum that
was caused by the spill. Marine  opportunistic
"weed" species are similar to weed species
found on land, and are characterized by high
rates of reproduction, short life cycles, im-
pressive powers of dispersion, and a general
hardiness and adaptability. The marine worm
Capitella becomes fully mature in several weeks,
is very prolific, and is resistant to many types  of
pollution, including oil.
                                                                                                                                  21

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                                                   %
                                                                     0
                                                                       I
22

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What  About

Sublethal  Effects?

  So far, we have looked at the initial
mortality from the spill and the recovery
of affected communities. Other studies
of specific species have demonstrated
significant sublethal effects from chronic
exposure of animal populations to oil.
These effects are reflected in the
physical defects and abnormal behavior
observed in affected animals. Sublethal
effects are more subtle than direct mor-
tality and are important to consider
because they may occur at very low
concentrations of oil and can have
serious long term implications in the sur-
vival of a species in an affected area.
  A study of the Wild Harbor marsh
fiddler crab (Uca pugnax) demonstrated
the  severe chronic effects of the West
Falmouth spill —  population densities
were still reduced seven years after the
spill. The fiddler crab is important in salt
marsh food webs and in energy flow
between the marshes and open waters.
  Krebs and Burns concluded that "oil
spilled in certain environments may
have rather short-term effects on ben-
thic organisms, oil stranded in marsh-
lands contaminates the sediments and
becomes incorporated in the tissues of
marine organisms affecting the survival
and recovery of marine populations for
many years. Recovery from even this
small spill of fuel oil at West Falmouth
is still incomplete after seven years."
  These effects were detailed in the
study of a single marsh species.
Laboratory experiments and studies of
other spills have shown that oil pollu-
tion also disrupts the functions of
whole communities and ecosystems.
  These disruptions are less obvious
than mass mortality. In a finely bal-
anced ecosystem they are no less
dangerous. The West Falmouth study
has shown that chronic oil pollution
and its insidious long term effects can
be caused by a single, small spill.
Sublethal Effects on
Fiddler Crabs
• Caused behavioral problems such
  as disorientation and loss of a
  rapid escape response.
• Triggered physical disorders such
  as increased molting and inappro-
  priate display of mating colors.
• Contributed to heavy winter mor-
  tality through abnormally shallow
  burrows.
• Reduced the ratio of females to
  males.
• Prevented normal settlement of
  juveniles, thereby disrupting the
  age class distribution.


Sublethal Effects on
Ecosystems
• Disruption of normal behavior —
  feeding, breeding, locomotion
• Interference with thermoregula-
  tion — control of body tem-
  perature in birds and mammals
• Abnormal biological processes
• Reproductive rates
• Growth rates
• Competitive balance
• Predator-prey interactions
• Population age structure
                                     Fiddler Crab (Uca pugnax)
                                                                                                        23

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Implications 6}

West Fa/mouth

"A very important quest/on fs
why, in this case, can effects be
shown after such an extended
time period. Does the West
Fa/mouth oil spill represent a
special case?" A. D. Michael,
C. R. Van Raalte, and L. S.
Brown, Marine Biological
Laboratory, Woods Hole,
Massachusetts.
                            PROHIBITED  AREA
                               CLAMS, MUSSELS
                               PROHIBITED BY LAW
                                 SffllWOf HEALTH
24

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What Did the West
Falmouth Studies
Show?
  Taken together, the several research
efforts directed at the West Falmouth
spill provide irrefutable evidence of the
effects of this particular spill. Contam-
ination with oil from the barge Florida
was demonstrated by chemical analysis
and correlated with ecological impacts
ranging from mortality to behavioral
disturbances.
Effects of the West Falmouth
Oil Spill
• There was severe local mortality
  of the plants and animals of inter-
  tidal marsh and subtidal soft-
  bottom communities.
• Impacted  communities required
  years for recovery. Communities
  in early recovery phases were
  characterized by reduced species
  numbers,  dominance of oppor-
  tunistic species, and large fluc-
  tuations in populations.
• The No. 2 fuel oil was persistent,
  especially in the sponge-like
  marsh  areas which served as a
  source of  recontamination by
  continuously oozing  oil. Years
  after the spill,  traces of fuel oil
  were found in plants and animals
  of oiled areas. The recovery
  capacity of the communities was
  compromised  by the persistent
  and shifting fuel oil.
• Sublethal  effects of chronic oil
  pollution were apparent for at
  least seven years after the spill.
Pollution Effects on
Marsh Ecosystems
• The dominance of opportunistic
  species in recovering commun-
  ities reduces the diversity of food
  items offered to bottom feeders,
  thereby interfering with the nor-
  mal transfer of energy from lower
  to higher levels of the food web,
  including man.
• Loss of marsh grass reduces the
  effectiveness  of a marsh as a
  nursery area for marine organ-
  isms, a runoff water purification
  system, and a land stabilization
  mechanism.
Are These Effects

Significant?

  Pollution impacts are often con-
sidered in terms of financial loss. This
type of loss certainly occurred at West
Falmouth where the local shellfishing
and tourist industries experienced im-
mediate and obvious damage. But we
must also recognize the importance of
a healthy biosphere to man. Recreation
and aesthetic enjoyment are aspects of
a healthy environment that are certainly
important. Beyond aesthetics are the
basic life support services that nature
provides for humans and all other
organisms. At the most fundamental
level, these include the provision of
clean air and  water, and the transforma-
tion of solar energy into usable food
items. These natural life support services
are provided by complex interactions
between different types of organisms
and their environments: the functioning
ecosystem. Control mechanisms have
evolved to form systems that are
resilient by virtue of their complexity.
Scientific studies clearly show that
pollution and the altering of habitats
challenge the resiliency of natural
ecosystems and undermine the func-
tioning of nature as a life support
system.
                                                                                                        25

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What About  Other

Spills?

  No other oil spill has been as thor-
oughly studied as was West Falmouth.
Indications are that every spill does not
cause the long-term damage observed
at West Falmouth, and it must be
remembered that this spill affected a
relatively small area.  Offshore regions
and rocky habitats are thought to be
less sensitive than the marsh and
shallow tidal areas. Other factors that
are important in determining the sever-
ity of oil spill effects are:  the size of the
spill, the toxicity of the spilled oil, the
time of year, and the sensitivity of the
organisms exposed to oil. In some
cases, it is clear that oil spills can cause
serious long-term damage. Ecosystems
may also be exposed to additional oil
spills before they have completely
recovered from  previous  pollution inci-
dents. For example,  the oil spilled by
the Amoco Cadiz off the Brittany Coast
in 1978  impacted some of the same
areas as the Torrey Canyon spill of
1967. Small local spills occur with great
frequency along all of our coastlines.
Because complete recovery of com-
munities can require up to  ten years, or
perhaps longer,  the possibility of per-
manently changing the biological sys-
tems of our coasts through chronic ex-
posure to spilled oil is a very real one.
26

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Is More  Research

Needed?

  Yes. The West Falmouth researchers
have shown the value of rigorous,
multi-disciplinary research. If other
spills had been more thoroughly investi-
gated, would more serious impacts
have been discovered? Further research
can answer this question. Workers in
the field of oil pollution have identified
the following research needs including
long-term effects of spills, field studies
of ecosystems where chronic contam-
ination exists, and combined field and
laboratory studies addressing the sig-
nificance of sublethal effects. The West
Falmouth spill has emphasized the im-
portance of the persistence of  oil and
the significance of sublethal effects.
   Such research is costly, especially
offshore oceanographic research which
involves the use of ships and compli-
cated hardware in the field, and long
hours of laboratory effort for sample
processing. Analysis of data is also
costly because of the need for compu-
ters in state-of-the-art analyses. But
this research can answer important
questions about the effects of
pollution.
What  Is the Federal

Government  Doing?

  Federal agencies are conducting
research to learn more about spilled oil
and its ecological effects. The principal
research programs are administered by
the Department of the Interior, Bureau
of Land Management; the Department
of Commerce, National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration; National
Science Foundation; and the Environ-
mental Protection Agency. Research is
aimed at developing spill detection and
cleanup procedures, investigating
ecological effects,  documenting base-
line environmental conditions and
projecting the likely impacts of offshore
petroleum  resource development and
oil transport.
  The federal government is also con-
cerned with emergency response to oil
spills. The National Response Team
(NRT) is a multi-agency organization
that is responsible for oil spill contin-
gency planning at the national level.
The primary agencies represented on
the NRT are the Department of Trans-
portation (U.S. Coast Guard), Depart-
ment of Commerce (National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration),
Environmental Protection Agency,
Department of the Interior, and Depart-
ment of Defense. The NRT,  through
the provisions of the National Contin-
gency Plan, ensures that appropriate
spill cleanup operations are undertaken.
The Environmental Protection Agency
supplies quick response technical sup-
port on national and regional levels to
provide the scientific expertise needed
to make decisions about cleanup
operations, to assess the ecological
damage resulting from a particular spill,
and to coordinate research efforts in
the spill area. Through these and
related programs, the federal govern-
ment is attempting to reduce the
frequency of oil  spills, to effectively
mitigate the impacts of spills when they
occur, and to learn more about the ef-
fects of oil pollution.
                                      I
                                                                                                             27

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                                                                          In Overview  .  .  .

                                                                            Oil is at once a necessary compo-
                                                                          nent of our energy budget and a
                                                                          demonstrated threat to the marine en-
                                                                          vironment. Judiciously conducted
                                                                          research will further describe the en-
                                                                          vironmental price that society is paying
                                                                          for oil pollution. It is the  responsibility
                                                                          of citizens and decision makers to plan
                                                                          a reasonable course of petroleum
                                                                          resource development considering both
                                                                          energy requirements and the environ-
                                                                          mental consequences of  energy use.
28

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 For  Additional

 Information

 Local Oil Spill. G.R. Hampson and
 H.L.  Sanders. Oceanus, Vol. 25,
 pp. 8-11 (1969).
 Description of the immediate effects
 of the West Falmouth spill.
 An Ocean  of Oil. M. Blumer, H.L
 Sanders, J.R. Grassle, and G.R.
 Hampson. Environment, Vol. 13,
 No. 2, pp. 2-12(1971).
 An informative, easily understood
 presentation of the short-term im-
 pacts of the West Falmouth spill.
 A Reporter at Large — A Small
 Spill. W. Wertenbaker.  The New
 Yorker, Nov. 26, 1973.
 A personal  look at the West
 Falmouth spill.
 The West Falmouth Saga. H.L.
 Sanders. New Engineer, pp. 32-36
 (1974).
 The rebuttal of a respected scientist
 to misinterpretation of his own
 research.
 Aftermath of an Oil Spill: A Black
 Seven years. Science, Vol. 112,
 No. 6, p. 84 (1977).
 A one page summary of a seven-year
 study on the effects of the West
 Falmouth spill as felt by the fiddler
 crab.
 Effects  of  Oil on Marine Eco-
 systems: A Review for Adminis-
trators and Policy Makers.  O.R.
 Evans and S.D.  Rice. Fishery
Bulletin: Vol. 72, No. 3,  pp. 625-638
 (1974).
An easily understood review of
 ecological effects of oil spills.
 Oil Spills: Issues and Actions. T.L.
 Leitzell. Marine Technology Society
Journal, Vol. 11, No. 1,  pp. 26-29
 (1977).
A review of technical and legal
aspects of oil spills.
The Disaster That Didn't. D.
 Dedera.  EXXON USA, Vol. XVI, No.
3, pp. 11-15 (1977).
The oil industry looks at oil spills.
 Being Prepared for Future Argo
Merchants. J.H. Milgram.
 Technology Review, Vol. 79, No. 8,
pp. 14-27 (1977).
A popular analysis of the Argo
Merchant incident.
                                       Technical
                                        References
National Oil and Hazardous
Substances Pollution Contingency
Plan. Federal Register, Vol. 40, No.
28, pp. 6281-6302 (1975).
A discussion of federal response to
oil spills, including agency respon-
sibilities and contingency operations.
Oil Spills — EPA Research Sum-
mary. Mark Schaefer, ed. EPA-600/
8-79-007. February  1979.
A description of EPA research pro-
grams dealing with oil spills.
 Photo Credits:
 Cover  Carl T Herrman/MITRE Corporation
 2  Benjamin S. Harrison, Buzzards Bay, MA
 3  Carl J. Herrman/MITRE Corporation
 4  EPA Documerica
 7  William Lang, US EPA Environmental
    Research Lab, Narragansett, Rl
 8  Courtesy Falmouth Enterprise
 10  William Lang, US EPA Environmental
    Research Lab, Narragansett, Rl
 12  Carl T Herrman/MITRE Corporation
 15  (top) G.R. Hampson, Woods Hole
    Oceanographic Institute
 15  (bottom) William Lang, US EPA
    Environmental Research Lab,
    Narragansett, Rl
 16  US EPA National Marine Water Quality
    Lab, Narragansett, Rl
 17  Paul Dix, US EPA Environmental
    Research Lab, Narragansett, Rl
 18  William Lang, US EPA Environmental
    Research Lab, Narragansett, Rl
 22  (top left, Planktoniella sol [diatom])
    Dr. Paul Hargraves, Graduate School of
    Oceanography, University of Rhode
    Island
 22  (top right, Scaleworm) Dr. John Sieburth,
    Graduate School of Oceanography,
    University of Rhode Island
 22  (middle, Crab) William Lang, US EPA
    Environmental Research Lab,
    Narragansett, Rl
 22  (bottom, Horseshoe Crab) Cart T.
    Herrman/MITRE Corporation
 24  EPA Documerica
 25  NOAA
 26  (top) US EPA Environmental Research
    Lab, Narragansett, Rl
 26  (middle) UPI
 26  (bottom) NOAA
 27  EPA Documerica
 28  EPA Documerica
Blumer, M. and J. Sass. 1972. Oil Pollution Per-
sistence and Degradation of Spilled Fuel Oil.
Science 176: 1120-1122.
Farrington, J.W. 1977. Oil Pollution in the
Coastal Environment. In Estuarine Pollution
Control and Assessment: 385-400. EPA
440/1-77-007.
Gilfillan, E.S.  1975. "Decrease of Net Carbon
Rux in Two Species of Mussels Caused by Ex-
tracts of Crude Oil." Marine Biology 29: 53-58.
Grassle, J.R.  1972. "Species Diversity, Genetic
Variability and Environmental Uncertainty." In
Fifth European Marine Biological Symposium:
19-26.
Grassle, J.F. and J.P. Grassle. 1974. "Oppor-
tunistic Life Histories and Genetic Systems in
Marine Benthic Polychaetes." Journal of Marine
Research 32 (2): 253-284.
Krebs, C.T. and K.A. Bums. 1977. "Long-Term
Effects of an Oil Spill on Populations of the
Salt-Marsh Crab Ucapugnax." Science 197:
484-487.
Maiero, David J., R.J. Castle, O.L. Grain. 1978.
Protection, Cleanup and Restoration of Salt
Marshes Endangered by Oil Spills — A Pro-
cedural Manual. EPA 600/7-78-220.
Michael, A.D. 1976. "The Effects of Petroleum
Hydrocarbons on Marine Populations and Com-
munities." In Proceedings from Oil Symposium
in Seattle, Washington: 129-137.
Michael, A.D., C.R. Van Raalte and L.S.
Brown. 1975. "Long-Term Effects of an Oil Spill
at West Falmouth, Massachusetts." In
Proceedings of a Conference on Prevention and
Control of Oil Pollution: 573-582. API.
Moore, S.F. and R.L. Dwyer. 1974. "Effects of
Oil on Marine Organisms: A Critical Assessment
of Published Data." Water Research 8: 819-827.
Odum, W.E.  1970. "Insidious Alteration of the
Estaurine Environment." Transactions of the
American Fisheries Society 99 (4): 836-847.
Sanders, H.L. IN PRESS. "Florida Oil Spill Im-
pact on the Buzzards Bay Benthic Fauna: West
Falmouth." Draft of a paper presented at Oil/
Environment, 1977. Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Sanders, H.L., J.F. Grassle, G.R. Hampson, L.
Morse, and S. Gamer-Price. IN PRESS.
"Anatomy of an Oil Spill: The West Falmouth
Study." Draft submitted to EPA under Grant
No. R801001-024.
Straughan, D. 1972. "Factors Causing Environ-
mental Changes After an Oil Spill." Journal of
Petroleum Technology 24: 250-254.
Westman, W.E. 1977. "How Much Are Nature's
Services Worth?" Science 197: 960-964.
                                                                                                                    29

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