1. Mercury contamination and potential health risk to French seabirds: A multi-species and multi-site study.
- Author
-
Lemesle P, Carravieri A, Poiriez G, Batard R, Blanck A, Deniau A, Faggio G, Fort J, Gallien F, Jouanneau W, le Guillou G, Leray C, McCoy KD, Provost P, Santoni MC, Sebastiano M, Scher O, Ward A, Chastel O, and Bustamante P
- Subjects
- Animals, France, Risk Assessment, Birds, Charadriiformes, Mercury blood, Environmental Monitoring, Water Pollutants, Chemical analysis
- Abstract
Mercury (Hg) is a naturally occurring highly toxic element which circulation in ecosystems has been intensified by human activities. Hg is widely distributed, and marine environments act as its main final sink. Seabirds are relevant bioindicators of marine pollution and chicks are particularly suitable for biomonitoring pollutants as they reflect contamination at short spatiotemporal scales. This study aims to quantify blood Hg contamination and identify its drivers (trophic ecology inferred from stable isotopes of carbon (δ
13 C) and nitrogen (δ15 N), geographical location, chick age and species) in chicks of eight seabird species from 32 French sites representing four marine subregions: the English Channel and the North Sea, the Celtic Sea, the Bay of Biscay and the Western Mediterranean. Hg concentrations in blood ranged from 0.04 μg g-1 dry weight (dw) in herring gulls to 6.15 μg g-1 dw in great black-backed gulls. Trophic position (δ15 N values) was the main driver of interspecific differences, with species at higher trophic positions showing higher Hg concentrations. Feeding habitat (δ13 C values) also contributed to variation in Hg contamination, with higher concentrations in generalist species relying on pelagic habitats. Conversely, colony location was a weak contributor, suggesting a relatively uniform Hg contamination along the French coastline. Most seabirds exhibited low Hg concentrations, with 74% of individuals categorized as no risk, and < 0.5% at moderate risk, according to toxicity thresholds. However, recent work has shown physiological and fitness impairments in seabirds bearing Hg burdens considered to be safe, calling for precautional use of toxicity thresholds, and for studies that evaluate the impact of Hg on chick development., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF