1. Controls on magnesium, manganese, strontium, and barium concentrations recorded in freshwater mussel shells from Ohio.
- Author
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Geeza, Thomas J., Gillikin, David P., Goodwin, David H., Evans, Scott D., Watters, Thomas, and Warner, Nathaniel R.
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SEASHELLS , *FRESHWATER mussels , *BARIUM , *STRONTIUM , *BIVALVE shells , *WATER chemistry , *SURFACE chemistry - Abstract
Freshwater bivalve shells may record inter-annual fluctuations in water chemistry, which in turn may archive variations in solute load due to pollution or discharge events. Here, using weekly surface water chemistry collected at two locations and shells of Lampsilis cardium grown in the surface water we investigate if the Mg/Ca, Mn/Ca, Sr/Ca, and Ba/Ca ratios measured at high resolution in the shells on an intra-annual time scale consistently reflect the chemistry of the surface water. Two relationships appear highly correlated, Sr/Ca carb and Sr/Ca water , and Mn/Ca carb and temperature. Ba/Ca carb correlated strongly with Ba/Ca water in one shell but temperature in another shell yielding inconclusive results. Mn/Ca carb and Mg/Ca carb were not strongly correlated with elemental ratios in the water, but Mn/Ca carb did show variable, weak to moderate correlation with pH. We found consistent partition coefficient (D Me) values between individual shell samples grown in the same water with mean D Mg = 0.0006, D Mn = 17, D Ba = 0.13, and D Sr = 0.176. Sr/Ca carb and Sr/Ca water exhibited the strongest, most consistent correlation with partitioning coefficients that were consistent with published values, suggesting Sr/Ca carb can be used as a proxy for Sr/Ca water in freshwater mussels. Image 1 • Mussels grew over a 12 month period where water chemistry was monitored ~weekly. Shells were collected and analyzed for Mg, Mn, Sr, and Ba. • Pearson correlation (r > 0.8) suggests a strong relationship between Sr/Ca carb and Sr/Ca water , and Mn/Ca carb and temperature. • Sr/Ca carb yielded lower r values when correlated with other parameters such as temperature, growth rate, and pH. • Correlation between Ba/Ca water and Ba/Ca carb was inconclusive, and for Mn/Ca carb and Mg/Ca carb there was no strong correlation. • Metal/Calcium in the mussels and partitioning coefficients analyzed in this study were in good agreement with relevant literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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