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Dive into the research topics where Hilde Cecilie Trannum is active.

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Featured researches published by Hilde Cecilie Trannum.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2016

Environmental effects of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill: A review.

Jonny Beyer; Hilde Cecilie Trannum; Torgeir Bakke; Peter V. Hodson; Tracy K. Collier

The Deepwater Horizon oil spill constituted an ecosystem-level injury in the northern Gulf of Mexico. Much oil spread at 1100-1300m depth, contaminating and affecting deepwater habitats. Factors such as oil-biodegradation, ocean currents and response measures (dispersants, burning) reduced coastal oiling. Still, >2100km of shoreline and many coastal habitats were affected. Research demonstrates that oiling caused a wide range of biological effects, although worst-case impact scenarios did not materialize. Biomarkers in individual organisms were more informative about oiling stress than population and community indices. Salt marshes and seabird populations were hard hit, but were also quite resilient to oiling effects. Monitoring demonstrated little contamination of seafood. Certain impacts are still understudied, such as effects on seagrass communities. Concerns of long-term impacts remain for large fish species, deep-sea corals, sea turtles and cetaceans. These species and their habitats should continue to receive attention (monitoring and research) for years to come.


Polar Biology | 2007

Multidecadal stability of benthic community structure in a high-Arctic glacial fjord (van Mijenfjord, Spitsbergen)

Paul E. Renaud; Maria Włodarska-Kowalczuk; Hilde Cecilie Trannum; Børge Holte; Jan Marcin Węsławski; Sabine Cochrane; Salve Dahle; Bjørn Gulliksen

Long-term change in benthic community structure may have significant impact on ecosystem functions. Accelerating climate change and increased human activity in the Arctic suggest that benthic communities in this region may be expected to exhibit change over time scales coinciding with these potential stressors. In 2000 and 2001, we resampled the soft-sediment communities of van Mijenfjord, a semi-closed (silled) fjord system on the west coast of Spitsbergen, following initial surveys in 1980. Multivariate community analyses and biodiversity indices identified distinct regions within the fjord. The communities characteristic of two regions were very similar to those sampled 20 years earlier. Regions corresponded with fjord basins and to community patterns and diversity gradients identified for many other Arctic fjords. Benthic communities in open (unsilled) fjords in the area have recently been shown to respond to decadal scale climatic fluctuation. We suggest that semi-closed fjords may be less susceptible to this type of environmental variability, and that communities are shaped by an interaction of impacts from local topography, glacial runoff, local circulation patterns, and faunal life-history traits. Open and closed fjords may respond to climatic warming trends in different ways, resulting in a subsequent divergence in spatial patterns of resident communities.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2015

Submarine and deep-sea mine tailing placements: a review of current practices, environmental issues, natural analogs and knowledge gaps in Norway and internationally

Eva Ramírez-Llodra; Hilde Cecilie Trannum; Anita Evenset; Lisa A. Levin; Malin Andersson; Tor Erik Finne; Ana Hilário; Belinda Flem; Guttorm Christensen; Morten Schaanning; Ann Vanreusel

The mining sector is growing in parallel with societal demands for minerals. One of the most important environmental issues and economic burdens of industrial mining on land is the safe storage of the vast amounts of waste produced. Traditionally, tailings have been stored in land dams, but the lack of land availability, potential risk of dam failure and topography in coastal areas in certain countries results in increasing disposal of tailings into marine systems. This review describes the different submarine tailing disposal methods used in the world in general and in Norway in particular, their impact on the environment (e.g. hyper-sedimentation, toxicity, processes related to changes in grain shape and size, turbidity), current legislation and need for future research. Understanding these impacts on the habitat and biota is essential to assess potential ecosystem changes and to develop best available techniques and robust management plans.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2011

Rapid macrofaunal colonization of water-based drill cuttings on different sediments

Hilde Cecilie Trannum; Åshild Setvik; Karl Norling; Hans C. Nilsson

A field experiment was conducted to investigate how water-based drill cuttings and sediment type influence colonization of soft bottom communities. Bottom frames with trays containing defaunated sediments were placed at the seabed for 6 months to study colonization of macrofauna. Two different sediments (coarse and fine) were used, and 6 or 24 mm layer of water-based drill cuttings were added on top of these sediments. Some of the sediments were controls with no additions. In the end of the experiment, the oxygen availability in sediment porewater and macrofaunal abundance were reduced in treatments with 24 mm drill cuttings compared to controls. Tube-building annelids were particularly sensitive to drill cuttings. However, these responses were only minor, and notably, the drill cuttings initiated a weaker faunal response than sediment type and site of the bottom frame. Sediments capped with water-based drill cuttings thus showed a rapid colonization of macrofaunal communities.


Science of The Total Environment | 2018

Effects of submarine mine tailings on macrobenthic community structure and ecosystem processes

Hilde Cecilie Trannum; Hege Gundersen; Carlos Escudero-Oñate; Joachim Tørum Johansen; Morten Schaanning

A mesocosm experiment with intact benthic communities was conducted to evaluate the effects of mine tailings on benthic community structure and biogeochemical processes. Two types of tailings were supplied from process plants using flotation and flocculation chemicals, while a third type was absent of added chemicals. All tailings impacted the sediment community at thin layers, and through more mechanisms than merely hypersedimentation. In general, the strongest impact was observed in a very fine-grained tailings containing flotation chemicals. The second strongest occurred in tailings with no process chemicals. The tailings with flocculation chemicals initiated the weakest response. Fluxes of oxygen, nitrate and ammonium provided some indications on biodegradation of organic phases. Release of phosphate and silicate decreased with increasing layer thickness of all three tailings. A threshold level of 2cm was identified both for faunal responses and for fluxes of phosphate and silicate. The particular impact mechanisms should receive more attention in future studies in order to minimize the environmental risk associated with tailings disposal.


Archive | 2019

The Environmental Status of Norwegian Coastal Waters

Christopher Harman; Trine Bekkby; Sara Calabrese; Hilde Cecilie Trannum; Eivind Oug; Anders G. Hagen; Norman Whitaker Green; Øyvind Kaste; Helene Frigstad

Abstract Norway has a very long and varied coastline which includes archipelagos, beaches, mountains, and the famous fjords. Its length together with topography and, not least, the Gulf Stream govern its climate, which appears to be becoming both warmer and wetter. This precipitation results in large inputs of freshwater into the surrounding seas. Important habitats include kelp forests, seagrass beds, soft substrates, and the world’s largest cold-water corals reefs. The importance of the diversity and ecosystem function of these habitats is becoming increasingly understood although they are all challenged by anthropogenic pressures, not least climate change. Despite being relatively sparsely populated Norwegian cities and several major industries may exert considerable pressure on the marine environment. These include the oil and gas industry and aquaculture, both of which are extremely important to the Norwegian economy. In addition, capture fisheries remain important. Overall trends in the input of pollutants to coastal waters are largely downward (metals and organics), with a few exceptions, noticeably some increases in nutrients in the south due to changes in climate. A similar overall decline in pollutants in coastal marine organisms is also apparent, with a reduction in concentrations in recent years. Many contaminated sites persist however, including inner harbors and areas which have historically received industrial discharges. Consumption advices for seafood persist at many of these sites. There is also some evidence of increasing mercury concentrations in some areas, such as Oslofjord. Norway enforces most European and other international agreements regarding the protection and management of marine ecosystems, and has now has four national marine parks, all in the South of the country, as well as several other protected areas.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2017

Drilling discharges reduce sediment reworking of two benthic species

Hilde Cecilie Trannum

Effects of water-based drill cuttings on sediment reworking activity were studied on two important benthic bioturbators (the bivalve Abra segmentum and the brittle star Amphiura filiformis) using thin aquaria, fluorescent-dyed sediment particles (luminophores), time lapse photography and image analysis. In the present context, sediment reworking activity was measured as maximum mixing depth and total amount of luminophores transported below the sediment-water interface. There was a significant reduction in the amount of downward transported luminophores in drill cuttings treatments compared to controls with added natural sediments for both species, which also was true regarding maximum mixing depth for A. segmentum. Further, A. filiformis showed a clearly delayed burrowing of luminophores in the drill cuttings treatment compared to control. To conclude, the study showed that water-based drill cuttings have the potential to reduce sediment reworking. Further, it is evidenced that water-based drill cuttings not only cause burial effects.


Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 2010

Effects of sedimentation from water-based drill cuttings and natural sediment on benthic macrofaunal community structure and ecosystem processes.

Hilde Cecilie Trannum; Hans C. Nilsson; Morten Schaanning; Sigurd Øxnevad


Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 2004

Effects of copper, cadmium and contaminated harbour sediments on recolonisation of soft-bottom communities

Hilde Cecilie Trannum; Frode Olsgard; Jens Skei; Jane Indrehus; Sidsel Øverås; Jonny Eriksen


Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 2008

Effects of drill cuttings on biogeochemical fluxes and macrobenthos of marine sediments

Morten Schaanning; Hilde Cecilie Trannum; Sigurd Øxnevad; JoLynn Carroll; Torgeir Bakke

Collaboration


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Morten Schaanning

Norwegian Institute for Water Research

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Janne Kim Gitmark

Norwegian Institute for Water Research

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Sigurd Øxnevad

Norwegian Institute for Water Research

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Kjell Magnus Norderhaug

Norwegian Institute for Water Research

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Brage Rygg

Norwegian Institute for Water Research

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Eivind Oug

Norwegian Institute for Water Research

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Hege Gundersen

Norwegian Institute for Water Research

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Norman Whitaker Green

Norwegian Institute for Water Research

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Birger Bjerkeng

Norwegian Institute for Water Research

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Frithjof E. Moy

Norwegian Institute for Water Research

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