Seagrass (Ruppia maritima) responses to oil exposure in mesocosms

Abstract

Seagrass cores (6“ diameter, PVC, 10” long) of Ruppia maritima were collected in the Chandeleur Islands (Louisiana) and Estero Bay (Florida) to examine how the two populations responded to oil exposure (50% water accommodated fraction). Three cores from each site served as controls (no oil exposure), whereas three others served as treatment (50% WAF, diluted by half every day for 8 days). Seagrass response was measured via quantum yield (using a Dive PAM fluorometer) and seagrass blade color (using Munsell Plant Tissue color chips).

Purpose

To report data on the seagrass response to oil exposure from two sites: the Chandeleur Islands (Louisiana) and Estero Bay (Florida). The Estero Bay seagrasses were considered to be naïve to oil, as no oil extraction industry is present in the eastern Gulf of Mexico. The Chandeleur Island seagrasses were assumed to be tolerant to (some) oil exposure, due the established petroleum industry in the northern Gulf.

DOI: doi:10.7266/N7DB8069

Suggested Citation

Michael Parsons, Allison Bury. 2018. Seagrass (Ruppia maritima) responses to oil exposure in mesocosms. Distributed by: Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative Information and Data Cooperative (GRIIDC), Harte Research Institute, Texas A&M University–Corpus Christi. doi:10.7266/N7DB8069

Funded by: Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative (GoMRI)

Funding cycle: RFP-IV

Research group: Alabama Center for Ecological Resilience (ACER)

Data and Resources

Additional Info

Field Value
Author Michael L. Parsons
Maintainer data@disl.org
Last Updated October 25, 2022, 19:31 (UTC)
Created July 27, 2022, 14:33 (UTC)
DOI doi:10.7266/N7DB8069
ISO.principalInvestigator Michael L. Parsons <mparsons@fgcu.edu>
Theme Keywords Seagrass, Ruppia maritima, sediment, mesocosm, oil exposure, water accommodated fraction, quantum yield