Accumulation of dietary and waterborne mercury by fish - experimental and whole-ecosystem approaches using enriched stable isotopes

To improve our understanding of how environmental mercury (Hg) concentrations influence Hg in fish, I conducted a field experiment to quantify the relative contributions of dietary and aqueous exposure to Hg levels in fish. To further assess the importance of water as a source of Hg to fish, a long...

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Main Author: Hrenchuk, Lee
Other Authors: Blanchfield, Paul (Biological Sciences)
Language:en_US
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/4269
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spelling ndltd-MANITOBA-oai-mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca-1993-42692014-01-31T03:32:11Z Accumulation of dietary and waterborne mercury by fish - experimental and whole-ecosystem approaches using enriched stable isotopes Hrenchuk, Lee Blanchfield, Paul (Biological Sciences) Hann, Brenda (Biological Sciences) Paterson, Michael (Entomology) bioaccumulation METAALICUS To improve our understanding of how environmental mercury (Hg) concentrations influence Hg in fish, I conducted a field experiment to quantify the relative contributions of dietary and aqueous exposure to Hg levels in fish. To further assess the importance of water as a source of Hg to fish, a long-term dataset from the Mercury Experiment to Assess Atmospheric Loading in Canada and the United States was used as input data for two Hg bioaccumulation models: OneFish (accumulation from food and water) and Wisconsin (accumulation from food). Both approaches used enriched stable isotopes of Hg. Yellow perch accumulated 10-21% of their Hg directly from water. Wisconsin model predictions were significantly lower than observed fish Hg concentrations and OneFish predictions. These results suggest that waterborne Hg is an important contributor to Hg in fish and that the exclusion of water in bioaccumulation models may produce underestimates of fish Hg concentrations. 2010-10-13T14:26:17Z 2010-10-13T14:26:17Z 2010-10-13T14:26:17Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/4269 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic bioaccumulation
METAALICUS
spellingShingle bioaccumulation
METAALICUS
Hrenchuk, Lee
Accumulation of dietary and waterborne mercury by fish - experimental and whole-ecosystem approaches using enriched stable isotopes
description To improve our understanding of how environmental mercury (Hg) concentrations influence Hg in fish, I conducted a field experiment to quantify the relative contributions of dietary and aqueous exposure to Hg levels in fish. To further assess the importance of water as a source of Hg to fish, a long-term dataset from the Mercury Experiment to Assess Atmospheric Loading in Canada and the United States was used as input data for two Hg bioaccumulation models: OneFish (accumulation from food and water) and Wisconsin (accumulation from food). Both approaches used enriched stable isotopes of Hg. Yellow perch accumulated 10-21% of their Hg directly from water. Wisconsin model predictions were significantly lower than observed fish Hg concentrations and OneFish predictions. These results suggest that waterborne Hg is an important contributor to Hg in fish and that the exclusion of water in bioaccumulation models may produce underestimates of fish Hg concentrations.
author2 Blanchfield, Paul (Biological Sciences)
author_facet Blanchfield, Paul (Biological Sciences)
Hrenchuk, Lee
author Hrenchuk, Lee
author_sort Hrenchuk, Lee
title Accumulation of dietary and waterborne mercury by fish - experimental and whole-ecosystem approaches using enriched stable isotopes
title_short Accumulation of dietary and waterborne mercury by fish - experimental and whole-ecosystem approaches using enriched stable isotopes
title_full Accumulation of dietary and waterborne mercury by fish - experimental and whole-ecosystem approaches using enriched stable isotopes
title_fullStr Accumulation of dietary and waterborne mercury by fish - experimental and whole-ecosystem approaches using enriched stable isotopes
title_full_unstemmed Accumulation of dietary and waterborne mercury by fish - experimental and whole-ecosystem approaches using enriched stable isotopes
title_sort accumulation of dietary and waterborne mercury by fish - experimental and whole-ecosystem approaches using enriched stable isotopes
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/4269
work_keys_str_mv AT hrenchuklee accumulationofdietaryandwaterbornemercurybyfishexperimentalandwholeecosystemapproachesusingenrichedstableisotopes
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