Methylmercury in marine ecosystems : spatial patterns and processes of production, bioaccumulation, and biomagnification

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2008-09-30
Authors
Chen, Celia
Amirbahman, Aria
Fisher, Nicholas S.
Harding, Gareth
Lamborg, Carl H.
Nacci, Diane E.
Taylor, David
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Methylmercury
Bioaccumulation
Trophic transfer
Biomagnification
Bioadvection
Abstract
The spatial variation of MeHg production, bioaccumulation and biomagnification in marine food webs is poorly characterized but critical to understanding the links between sources and higher trophic levels such as fish that are ultimately vectors of human and wildlife exposure. This paper discusses both large and local scale processes controlling Hg supply, methylation, bioaccumulation and transfer in marine ecosystems. While global estimates of Hg supply suggest important open ocean reservoirs of MeHg, only coastal processes and food webs are known sources of MeHg production, bioaccumulation, and bioadvection. The patterns observed to date suggest that not all sources and biotic receptors are spatially linked and that physical and ecological processes are important in transferring MeHg from source regions to bioaccumulation in marine food webs and from lower to higher trophic levels.
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Author Posting. © International Association for Ecology and Health, 2008. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Springer for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in EcoHealth 5 (2008): 399-408, doi:10.1007/s10393-008-0201-1.
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