Biomass and canopy condition indicators of short-term effects and long-term recovery of mangrove forests affected by a large oil spill.
Duke, N.C., and Canning, A.D. (2024) Biomass and canopy condition indicators of short-term effects and long-term recovery of mangrove forests affected by a large oil spill. Bulletin of Marine Science. (In Press)
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Abstract
This study investigated short- and long-term effects of a large oil spill on mangrove forests in Panama on the Atlantic coast of Central America. In 1986, more than 8 million L of crude oil were released into Bahía Las Minas causing massive tree mortality of approximately 69 ha of Rhizophora mangle dominated mangrove forests. During the 3–4 yr post spill, oil-affected areas were found to extend more widely, with approximately 300 ha of canopy thinning in surrounding forests. Oil-affected surviving mangroves had reduced leaf biomass of approximately 28%, with up to 12% lost each year, during 1989–1991. Affected trees at the time were in the process of shedding upper canopy foliage. Therefore, where oil had persisted in normally anoxic mangrove soils, there was an ongoing threat to the survival and recovery of both lethal and sublethal oil-affected mangrove habitat. We investigated the long-term implications of sublethal and lethal effects using NDVI measures of canopy condition from 1984 to 2023. The initial effects of the 1986 oil spill were shown as an abrupt decline in NDVI levels in oil-affected sites, with losses of approximately 80% in sites of tree death, and up to 20% in sublethal affected trees. However, after one to two decades, there was substantive recovery of forest canopies with no persistent differences between oiled and unoiled mangrove forests. Long-term recovery trajectories depicted in NDVI timeseries showed sublethal-affected mangrove forest canopies had returned to prespill conditions within approximately 10 yrs post oiling, while lethal-affected canopies had taken 15–20 yrs, nearly twice as long.
Item ID: | 85283 |
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Item Type: | Article (Research - C1) |
ISSN: | 1553-6955 |
Copyright Information: | Green Open Access: Authors who select Green Open Access may share a link (such as the article DOI) to their article on any digital platform. Green Open Access articles may also be uploaded to institutional repositories for internal institutional use. Articles classified as Green are automatically transitioned to Gold after a five (5) year embargo period, during which they are accessible via an institutional subscription. These article may also be shared directly with interested students or research collaborators for personal use only. |
Date Deposited: | 06 May 2025 01:24 |
FoR Codes: | 31 BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES > 3103 Ecology > 310305 Marine and estuarine ecology (incl. marine ichthyology) @ 30% 41 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES > 4102 Ecological applications > 410201 Bioavailability and ecotoxicology @ 50% 41 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES > 4105 Pollution and contamination > 410504 Surface water quality processes and contaminated sediment assessment @ 20% |
SEO Codes: | 18 ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT > 1802 Coastal and estuarine systems and management > 180201 Assessment and management of coastal and estuarine ecosystems @ 100% |
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