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The fate of mercury in Arctic terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, a review
- Source :
- Environmental Chemistry, Environmental Chemistry, CSIRO Publishing, 2012, 9 (4), pp.321-355. ⟨10.1071/EN11140⟩, Douglas, T A D, Loseto, L L, Macdonald, R W, Outridge, P, Dommergue, A, Poulain, A, Amyot, M, Barkay, T, Berg, T, Chételat, J, Constant, P, Evans, M, Ferrari, C, Gantner, N, Johnson, M S, Kirk, J, Kroer, N, Larose, C, Lean, D, Nielsen, T G, Poissant, L, Rognerud, S, Skov, H, Sørensen, S, Wang, F, Wilson, S & Zdanowicz, C M 2012, ' The fate of mercury in Arctic terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, a review ', Environmental Chemistry (Online), vol. 9, pp. 321-355 . https://doi.org/10.1071/EN11140, Douglas, T A, Loseto, L L, Macdonald, R W, Outridge, P, Dommergue, A, Poulain, A, Amyot, M, Barkay, T, Berg, T, Chetelat, J, Constant, P, Evans, M, Ferrari, C, Gantner, N, Johnson, M S, Kirk, J, Kroer, N, Larose, C, Lean, D, Nielsen, T G, Poissant, L, Rognerud, S, Skov, H, Sorensen, S, Wang, F Y, Wilson, S & Zdanowicz, C M 2012, ' The fate of mercury in Arctic terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, a review ', Environmental Chemistry (Online), vol. 9, no. 4, pp. 321-355 . https://doi.org/10.1071/en11140
- Publication Year :
- 2012
- Publisher :
- HAL CCSD, 2012.
-
Abstract
- Environmental contextMercury, in its methylated form, is a neurotoxin that biomagnifies in marine and terrestrial foodwebs leading to elevated levels in fish and fish-eating mammals worldwide, including at numerous Arctic locations. Elevated mercury concentrations in Arctic country foods present a significant exposure risk to Arctic people. We present a detailed review of the fate of mercury in Arctic terrestrial and marine ecosystems, taking into account the extreme seasonality of Arctic ecosystems and the unique processes associated with sea ice and Arctic hydrology. AbstractThis review is the result of a series of multidisciplinary meetings organised by the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme as part of their 2011 Assessment ‘Mercury in the Arctic’. This paper presents the state-of-the-art knowledge on the environmental fate of mercury following its entry into the Arctic by oceanic, atmospheric and terrestrial pathways. Our focus is on the movement, transformation and bioaccumulation of Hg in aquatic (marine and fresh water) and terrestrial ecosystems. The processes most relevant to biological Hg uptake and the potential risk associated with Hg exposure in wildlife are emphasised. We present discussions of the chemical transformations of newly deposited or transported Hg in marine, fresh water and terrestrial environments and of the movement of Hg from air, soil and water environmental compartments into food webs. Methylation, a key process controlling the fate of Hg in most ecosystems, and the role of trophic processes in controlling Hg in higher order animals are also included. Case studies on Eastern Beaufort Sea beluga (Delphinapterus leucas) and landlocked Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus) are presented as examples of the relationship between ecosystem trophic processes and biologic Hg levels. We examine whether atmospheric mercury depletion events (AMDEs) contribute to increased Hg levels in Arctic biota and provide information on the links between organic carbon and Hg speciation, dynamics and bioavailability. Long-term sequestration of Hg into non-biological archives is also addressed. The review concludes by identifying major knowledge gaps in our understanding, including: (1) the rates of Hg entry into marine and terrestrial ecosystems and the rates of inorganic and MeHg uptake by Arctic microbial and algal communities; (2) the bioavailable fraction of AMDE-related Hg and its rate of accumulation by biota and (3) the fresh water and marine MeHg cycle in the Arctic, especially the marine MeHg cycle.
- Subjects :
- 010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
Biomagnification
Fluorescence spectrometry
010501 environmental sciences
01 natural sciences
Geochemistry and Petrology
Arctic char
Environmental Chemistry
Ecosystem
14. Life underwater
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
biology
Ecology
Chemistry
Aquatic ecosystem
[SPI.NRJ]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Electric power
Biota
15. Life on land
biology.organism_classification
Arctic
13. Climate action
Chemistry (miscellaneous)
Environmental chemistry
[SDE]Environmental Sciences
Terrestrial ecosystem
geographic locations
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 14482517 and 14498979
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Environmental Chemistry, Environmental Chemistry, CSIRO Publishing, 2012, 9 (4), pp.321-355. ⟨10.1071/EN11140⟩, Douglas, T A D, Loseto, L L, Macdonald, R W, Outridge, P, Dommergue, A, Poulain, A, Amyot, M, Barkay, T, Berg, T, Chételat, J, Constant, P, Evans, M, Ferrari, C, Gantner, N, Johnson, M S, Kirk, J, Kroer, N, Larose, C, Lean, D, Nielsen, T G, Poissant, L, Rognerud, S, Skov, H, Sørensen, S, Wang, F, Wilson, S & Zdanowicz, C M 2012, ' The fate of mercury in Arctic terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, a review ', Environmental Chemistry (Online), vol. 9, pp. 321-355 . https://doi.org/10.1071/EN11140, Douglas, T A, Loseto, L L, Macdonald, R W, Outridge, P, Dommergue, A, Poulain, A, Amyot, M, Barkay, T, Berg, T, Chetelat, J, Constant, P, Evans, M, Ferrari, C, Gantner, N, Johnson, M S, Kirk, J, Kroer, N, Larose, C, Lean, D, Nielsen, T G, Poissant, L, Rognerud, S, Skov, H, Sorensen, S, Wang, F Y, Wilson, S & Zdanowicz, C M 2012, ' The fate of mercury in Arctic terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, a review ', Environmental Chemistry (Online), vol. 9, no. 4, pp. 321-355 . https://doi.org/10.1071/en11140
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....ca937472c5d5ffe8e57c7398bce2feae
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1071/EN11140⟩