A model of mercury cycling and isotopic fractionation in the ocean
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Published:2018-10-26
Issue:20
Volume:15
Page:6297-6313
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Archer David E.ORCID, Blum Joel D.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Mercury speciation and isotopic fractionation processes
have been incorporated into the HAMOCC offline ocean tracer advection code.
The model is fast enough to allow a wide exploration of the sensitivity of
the Hg cycle in the oceans, and of factors controlling human exposure to
monomethyl-Hg through the consumption of fish. Vertical particle transport
of Hg appears to play a discernable role in setting present-day Hg
distributions, which we surmise by the fact that in simulations without
particle transport, the high present-day Hg deposition rate leads to an Hg
maximum at the sea surface, rather than a subsurface maximum as observed. Hg
particle transport has a relatively small impact on anthropogenic Hg uptake,
but it sequesters Hg deeper in the water column, so that excess Hg is
retained in the model ocean for a longer period of time after anthropogenic
Hg deposition is stopped. Among 10 rate constants in the model, steady-state
Hg concentrations are most sensitive to reactions that are sources or sinks
of Hg(0), the evasion of which to the atmosphere is the dominant sink term
in the surface ocean. Isotopic fractionations in the interconversion
reactions are most strongly expressed, in the isotopic signatures of
dissolved Hg, in reactions that involve the dominant dissolved species,
Hg(II), including mass independent fractionation during Hg photoreduction.
The Δ199Hg of MMHg in the model, subject to photoreduction
fractionation, reproduces the Δ199Hg of fish in the upper 1000 m of the ocean, while the impact of anthropogenic Hg deposition on Hg
isotope ratios is essentially negligible.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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