Variation in Terrestrial and Aquatic Sources of Methylmercury in Stream Predators as Revealed by Stable Mercury Isotopes


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Authors: Tsui, MTK; Blum, JD; Finlay, JC; Balogh, SJ; Nollet, YH; Palen, WJ; Power, ME
Year: 2014
Journal: Environmental Science & Technology 48: 10128-10135   Article Link (DOI)  PubMed
Title: Variation in Terrestrial and Aquatic Sources of Methylmercury in Stream Predators as Revealed by Stable Mercury Isotopes
Abstract: Mercury (Hg) is widely distributed in the environment, and its organic form, methylmercury (MeHg), can extensively bioaccumulate and biomagnify in aquatic and terrestrial food webs. Concentrations of MeHg in organisms are highly variable, and the sources in natural food webs are often not well understood. This study examined stable isotope ratios of MeHg (mass-dependent fractionation, as delta Hg-202(MeHg); and mass-independent fractionation, as Delta Hg-199(MeHg)) in benthic invertebrates, juvenile steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss), and water striders (Gerris remigis) along a stream productivity gradient, as well as carnivorous terrestrial invertebrates, in a forested watershed at the headwater of South Fork Eel River in northern California. Throughout the sampling sites, delta Hg-202(MeHg) (after correction due to the effect of MeHg photodegradation) was significantly different between benthic (median = -1.40 parts per thousand; range, -2.34 to -0.78 parts per thousand; total number of samples = 29) and terrestrial invertebrates (median = +0.51 parts per thousand; range, -0.37 to +1.40 parts per thousand; total number of samples = 9), but no major difference between these two groups was found for Delta Hg-199(MeHg). Steelhead trout (52 individual fishes) have MeHg of predominantly aquatic origins, with a few exceptions at the upstream locations (e.g., 1 fish collected in a tributary had a purely terrestrial MeHg source and 4 fishes had mixed aquatic and terrestrial MeHg sources). Water striders (seven pooled samples) derive MeHg largely from terrestrial sources throughout headwater sections. These data suggest that direct terrestrial subsidy (e.g., terrestrial invertebrates falling into water) can be important for some stream predators in headwater streams and could represent an important means of transfer of terrestrially derived MeHg (e.g., in situ methylation within forests, atmospheric sources) to aquatic ecosystems. Moreover, these findings show that terrestrial subsidies can enhance MeHg bioaccumulation of consumers in headwater streams where aqueous MeHg levels are very low.
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