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Featured researches published by Ute Brönner.


Marine Environmental Research | 2015

Modeling filtration of dispersed crude oil droplets by the copepod Calanus finmarchicus.

Raymond Nepstad; Ingvild Fladvad Størdal; Ute Brönner; Trond Nordtug; Bjørn Henrik Hansen

Oil droplets may form and disperse in the water column after an accidental spill of crude oil or petroleum products at sea. Micro-sized oil droplets may be available for filter feeding organisms, such as the copepod Calanus finmarchicus, which has been shown to filter oil droplets. In the present paper, a modeling approach was used to estimate potential ingestion amounts by copepod filtration of oil droplets. The new model was implemented in the OSCAR (Oil Spill Contingency and Response) software suite, and tested for a series of oil spill scenarios and key parameters. Among these, the size of the filtered droplets was found to be the most important factor influencing the model results. Given the assumptions and simplifications of the model, filtration of dispersed crude oil by C. finmarchicus was predicted to affect the fate of 1-40% of the total released oil mass, depending on the release scenario and parameter values used, with the lower end of that range being more probable in an actual spill situation.


International Oil Spill Conference Proceedings | 2017

ERA Acute – A Multi-Compartment Quantitative Risk Assessment for Oil Spills

Cathrine Stephansen; Anders Bjørgesæter; Odd Willy Brude; Ute Brönner; Grethe Kjeilen-Eilertsen; Jean-Marie Libre; Tonje Waterloo Rogstad; Cecilie Fjeld Nygaard; Tom Sørnes; Geir Morten Skeie; Henrik Jonsson; Marte Rusten; Trond Nordtug; Mark Reed; Christian Collin-Hansen; Julie Damsgaard Jensen

Awareness of environmental risk and the demand for oil spill response planning associated with offshore marine operations has increased during the last decades. Environmental Risk Assessments (ERAs...


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2018

Spreading of waxy oils on calm water

Ute Brönner; Øistein Johansen; Frode Leirvik; Tor Nordam; Kristin Rist Sørheim

The objective of this paper is to provide a simple extension of the much-used gravity spreading model for oil on calm water to account for the spreading behavior of waxy crude oils in cold waters - including the observed retardation and eventual termination of spreading at certain oil film thicknesses. This peculiar behavior is not predicted by traditional spreading models for oil on calm water (i.e. viscous-gravity spreading models), but may occur due to non-Newtonian oil properties caused by precipitation of wax at low temperatures. To clarify the spreading behavior of such oils, SINTEF has conducted a series of laboratory experiments with a range of waxy oil mixtures. The present paper contains analyses of data from these experiments, including favorable comparisons with calculations by a proposed improved surface spreading model.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2018

Petroleum hydrocarbon and microbial community structure successions in marine oil-related aggregates associated with diatoms relevant for Arctic conditions

Roman Netzer; Ingrid A. Henry; Deni Ribicic; Daniel Wibberg; Ute Brönner; Odd Gunnar Brakstad

Oil-related aggregates (ORAs) may contribute to the fate of oil spilled offshore. However, our understanding about the impact of diatoms and associated bacteria involved in the formation of ORAs and the fate of oil compounds in these aggregates is still limited. We investigated these processes in microcosm experiments with defined oil dispersions in seawater at 5 °C, employing the Arctic diatom Fragilariopsis cylindrus and its associated bacterial assemblage to promote ORA formation. Accumulation of oil compounds, as well as biodegradation of naphthalenes in ORAs and corresponding water phases, was enhanced in the presence of diatoms. Interestingly, the genus Nonlabens was predominating the bacterial communities in diatom-supplemented microcosms, while this genus was not abundant in other samples. This work elucidates the relevance of diatom biomass for the formation of ORAs, microbial community structures and biodegradation processes in chemically dispersed oil at low temperatures relevant for Arctic conditions.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2018

Toxicokinetics of Crude Oil Components in Arctic Copepods

Ida Beathe Øverjordet; Raymond Nepstad; Bjørn Henrik Hansen; Tjalling Jager; Julia Farkas; Dag Altin; Ute Brönner; Trond Nordtug

The risk of accidental oil spills in the Arctic is on the rise due to increased shipping and oil exploration activities, making it essential to calibrate parameters for risk assessment of oil spills to Arctic conditions. The toxicokinetics of crude oil components were assessed by exposing one lipid-poor (CIII) and one lipid-rich (CV) stage of the Arctic copepod Calanus hyperboreus to crude oil WSF (water-soluble fraction). Water concentrations and total body residues (BR), as well as lipid volume fractions, were measured at regular intervals during exposure and recovery. Bioconcentration factors (BCFs) and elimination rates ( ke) for 26 petrogenic oil components were estimated from one-compartment models fitted to the BR data. Our parameters were compared to estimations made by the OMEGA bioaccumulation model, which uses the octanol-water partitioning coefficient ( KOW) in QSAR (quantitative structure-activity relationship) predictions. Our parameters for the lipid-poor CIIIs generally agreed with the OMEGA predictions, while neither the BCFs nor the kes for the lipid-rich CVs fitted within the realistic range of the OMEGA parameters. Both the uptake and elimination rates for the CVs were in general half an order of magnitude lower than the OMEGA predictions, showing an overestimation of these parameters by the OMEGA model.


European HSE Conference and Exhibition | 2013

A Real-Time Discharge Modelling and Environmental Monitoring System for Drilling Operations

Ute Brönner; Raymond Nepstad; Grim Eidnes; Petter Rønningen; Henrik Rye; Morten Omholt Alver; Dag Slagstad


Polar Biology | 2018

Biodegradation of dispersed oil in natural seawaters from Western Greenland and a Norwegian fjord

Odd Gunnar Brakstad; Emlyn John Davies; Deni Ribicic; Anika Winkler; Ute Brönner; Roman Netzer


SPE International Conference on Health, Safety, and Environment | 2014

Towards Integrated Environmental Monitoring

Amund Ulfsnes; Thomas Moskeland; Tone Karin Frost; Vidar Hepsoe; Geir Gramvik; Ute Brönner; Pal Rylandsholm


SPE International Conference and Exhibition on Health, Safety, Security, Environment, and Social Responsibility | 2018

ERA Acute-Implementation of a New Method for Environmental Risk Assessment of Acute Offshore Oil Spills

Jean-Marie Libre; Christian Collin-Hansen; Grethe Kjeilen-Eilertsen; Tonje Waterloo Rogstad; Cathrine Stephansen; Odd Willy Brude; Anders Bjørgesæter; Ute Brönner


82 | 2018

Impact and restitution model - Water column. ERA Acute for water column exposed organisms

Ute Brönner; Trond Nordtug; Henrik Jonsson; Karl Inne Ugland

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