Volume 5 - Issue 1

Oil spills and their ecotoxicological effects on marine and freshwater habitats

Beemkumar Nagappan Kanchan Awasthi Sahil Suri Dheeravath Raju Mohamed Jaffar A Dr. Prakash P Poonam Preeti Pradhan

Abstract

Annual oil spills of diverse scales pose distinct challenges to Freshwater Habitats. The intricate and variable characteristics of oil render standardized risk evaluation challenging. Examining the scientific landscape concerning oil's distinct difficulty, the biological effects of oil spills, and the application of rapid evaluation tools, such as commercial toxicity kits and tests, enables us to investigate the prevailing challenges hindering efficient and prompt risk evaluation of oils. Although monitoring programs benefit from well-validated standardized tests that examine impacts throughout different trophic levels at environmentally pertinent levels, a minimal proportion of the available tests are specifically designed for marine ecosystems or verified for assessing crude oil toxicity. The research discusses the application of fast testing at low trophic stages with pertinent sublethal toxicity tests to facilitate the characterization of the lethality of oil, dispersants, and their mixtures. The research recognizes innovative, passively dosing methods as an effective and consistent approach to enhancing the precision and stability of nominal doses. Subsequent research should investigate the potential integration of this tiered testing method with models of ecosystems to facilitate the forecast and risk evaluation of the Freshwater Habitats.

Keywords: Oil spills, Ecotoxicological effects, Marine, Freshwater, Biological

PlumX

Date

May 2025

Page Number

431-439
International Journal of Aquatic Research and Environmental Studies