Author:
St. Louis Vincent L.,Rudd John W. M.,Kelly Carol A.,Beaty Ken G.,Bloom Nicholas S.,Flett Robert J.
Abstract
Wetlands were found to be important sources of methyl mercury to the boreal forest ecosystem. Yields of methyl mercury were about 26–79 times higher from wetland portions of catchments (1.84–5.55 mg∙ha−1∙yr−1) than from purely upland areas (0.07 mg∙ha−1∙yr−1). Mass-balance estimates using methyl mercury inputs in wet deposition and outputs in runoff water indicated that purely upland catchments and lakes were sites of methyl mercury retention or demethylation, while catchments with wetland areas were sites of net methyl mercury production. These observations may explain the high concentrations of mercury in fish taken from lakes that are high in colour because they receive water from wetlands. There was no relationship between the concentration of total mercury and the concentration of methyl mercury in runoff water. Total mercury yields were low from a wetland-dominated catchment, higher from a combination upland/riparian wetland catchment, and highest from a purely upland catchment. The opposite was true for methyl mercury yields from these same catchments. This indicates that environmental factors other than total mercury concentration are controlling the production and loss of methyl mercury from catchments.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
448 articles.
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