Abstract
Anthropogenic activities have led to widespread contamination with mercury (Hg), a potent neurotoxin that bioaccumulates through food webs. Recent models estimated that, presently, 200 to 600 t of Hg is sequestered annually in deep-sea sediments, approximately doubling since industrialization. However, most studies did not extend to the hadal zone (6,000- to 11,000-m depth), the deepest ocean realm. Here, we report on measurements of Hg and related parameters in sediment cores from four trench regions (1,560 to 10,840 m), showing that the world’s deepest ocean realm is accumulating Hg at remarkably high rates (depth-integrated minimum–maximum: 24 to 220 μg ⋅ m−2 ⋅ y−1) greater than the global deep-sea average by a factor of up to 400, with most Hg in these trenches being derived from the surface ocean. Furthermore, vertical profiles of Hg concentrations in trench cores show notable increasing trends from pre-1900 [average 51 ± 14 (1σ) ng ⋅ g−1] to post-1950 (81 ± 32 ng ⋅ g−1). This increase cannot be explained by changes in the delivery rate of organic carbon alone but also need increasing Hg delivery from anthropogenic sources. This evidence, along with recent findings on the high abundance of methylmercury in hadal biota [R. Sun et al., Nat. Commun. 11, 3389 (2020); J. D. Blum et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 117, 29292–29298 (2020)], leads us to propose that hadal trenches are a large marine sink for Hg and may play an important role in the regulation of the global biogeochemical cycle of Hg.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
27 articles.
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