Marine Growth Studies on the North Sea Oil Platform Montrose Alpha

Abstract
Montrose Alpha oil platform was installed in the North Sea during Aug. 1975. Samples and photographs of marine growth on the platform jacket have been analyzed since 1977. Marine growth is depth related, with particular organisms or group of organisms dominant at various depths. Seaweeds dominate the sunlit surfaces extending down to a depth of -10 m. On shaded surfaces in the sunlit zone, arborescent bryozoans cover most of the substrate and continue down to -31 m. From -31 to -51 m depth, calcareous bryozoans cover large areas of the available substrate but hydroids are also common. From -51 to -71 m, encrusting bryozoans dominate the community. Below -71 m the aggregate tubeworm Filograna implexa and deep-water barnacle Balanus hameri are rapid changes in the depth range M.L.W. [mean low water], to -31 m and a more gradual change in the mid-water levels. Reasons for these changes are discussed. Marine growth on Montrose is compared with that on contemporary jackets in the Forties field, 40 km to the north-west. Causes for the observed differences are discussed.

This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit: