Effects of a former discharge of drill cuttings on the macrofauna community

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Abstract

The macrofauna near a former drilling site for gas in the southern North Sea was investigated. Three years prior to the investigation oil-contaminated drill cuttings had been discharged at the locality. Shortly after this operation had stopped, a macrofauna survey was carried out which showed effects at the drilling site and revealed a gradient of increase in species abundances and richness in the residual current direction from the discharge point. During the present study nine stations along the same transect were sampled, up to a distance of 15 000 m from the drilling site. Univariate methods showed decreasing trends in species number, biomass and total abundance within 1000 m of the drilling site. The abundances of some deep-burrowing species were low, particularly near the drilling site, but differences between the stations were in many cases not highly significant. Cluster analysis and ordination produced station patterns which point to a dependence between distance from the discharge site and the composition of the macrofauna. -from Authors

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Kroncke, I., Duineveld, G. C. A., Raak, S., Rachor, E., & Daan, R. (1992). Effects of a former discharge of drill cuttings on the macrofauna community. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 91(1–3), 277–287. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps091277

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