Literature DB >> 26372960

Mercury offloaded in Northern elephant seal hair affects coastal seawater surrounding rookery.

Jennifer M Cossaboon1, Priya M Ganguli2, A Russell Flegal3.   

Abstract

Methylmercury (MeHg) is a potent neurotoxin that is biomagnified approximately 1-10 million-fold in aquatic carnivores such as the Northern elephant seal (Mirounga angustirostris), whose excreta and molted pelage, in turn, constitute a source of environmental MeHg contamination at the base of marine food chains. The potential for this top-down contamination is greatest in coastal areas with productive marine ecosystems that provide ideal habitats for large marine mammal colonies that can number in the thousands. This recycling of MeHg was evidenced by comparing total mercury (HgT) and MeHg concentrations in seawater, and HgT in molted pelage of M. angustirostris, at the Año Nuevo State Reserve pinniped rookery with concentrations at neighboring coastal sites in Central California. Seawater MeHg concentrations around the rookery (average = 2.5 pM) were markedly higher than those at the comparison coastal sites (average = 0.30 pM), and were as high as 9.5 pM during the M. angustirostris molting season. As a consequence, excreta and molts from this marine mammal colony, and presumably other marine predator populations, constitute a major source of MeHg at the base of the local marine food chain.

Entities:  

Keywords:  biogeochemistry; biomagnification; environmental toxicology; marine mammals; mercury

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26372960      PMCID: PMC4593100          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1506520112

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  18 in total

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8.  Mercury as a global pollutant: sources, pathways, and effects.

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Authors:  David E Yates; Evan M Adams; Sofia E Angelo; David C Evers; John Schmerfeld; Marianne S Moore; Thomas H Kunz; Timothy Divoll; Samuel T Edmonds; Christopher Perkins; Robert Taylor; Nelson J O'Driscoll
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10.  Benthic and pelagic pathways of methylmercury bioaccumulation in estuarine food webs of the northeast United States.

Authors:  Celia Y Chen; Mark E Borsuk; Deenie M Bugge; Terill Hollweg; Prentiss H Balcom; Darren M Ward; Jason Williams; Robert P Mason
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2.  Leaching of mercury from seal carcasses into Antarctic soils.

Authors:  Ondřej Zvěřina; Pavel Coufalík; Kristián Brat; Rostislav Červenka; Jan Kuta; Ondřej Mikeš; Josef Komárek
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  2 in total

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