4.7 Article

Regional variation in mercury bioaccumulation among NW Atlantic Golden (Lopholatilus chamaeleonticeps) and Blueline (Caulolatilus microps) Tilefish

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 284, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2021.117177

Keywords

Body size; Continental shelf; Malacathidae; Resource partitioning; Sex; Nitrogen stable isotopes

Funding

  1. Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council [77632]
  2. Michigan Tech's REF program [DMA-80]
  3. Michigan Tech's Great Lakes Research Center's Student Research Grant Program

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Mercury concentrations in Tilefish from the NW Atlantic Ocean were analyzed, with <2% of individuals over 70 cm exceeding USEPA guidelines for human consumption. Different mercury exposure and assimilation kinetics were observed in Tilefish stocks from different regions, indicating broad geographic variability in mercury bioaccumulation.
Mercury (Hg) concentrations in fishes from the NW Atlantic Ocean pose concern due to the importance of this region to U.S. fisheries harvest. In this study, total Hg (THg) concentrations and nitrogen stable isotope (delta N-15) values were quantified in muscle tissues sampled from Golden (Lopholatilus chamaeleonticeps) and Blueline (Caulolatilus microps) Tilefish collected during a fishery-independent survey conducted in the NW Atlantic to compare bioaccumulation patterns between these species. Total Hg concentrations averaged (+/- SD) 0.4 +/- 0.4 mu g/g dry weight (d.w.) for L. chamaeleonticeps and 1.1 +/- 0.7 mu g/g d.w. for C. microps with <2% of all sampled fish, those >70 cm fork length, exceeding the most restrictive USEPA regulatory guidelines for human consumption (THg > 0.46 mu gig w.w.), when converted to wet weight concentrations. The THg concentrations reported here for individuals from the NW Atlantic stock are comparable to those reported for similarly sized individuals collected from the SW Atlantic stock but notably lower than those reported for Gulf of Mexico L. chamaeleonticeps, indicating different Hg exposure and assimilation kinetics for fish from the NW Atlantic, and highlights the broad geographic variability of Hg bioaccumulation among Tilefish stocks. Caulolatilus microps had higher delta N-15 values relative to L. chamaeleonticeps and a pattern of decreasing THg concentrations was also present from south to north across the study range. It is concluded that this trophic difference and spatial pattern in Tilefish THg concentrations emphasizes the habitat and resource partitioning mechanisms described for these sympatric species that permits their coexistence in the continental shelf environment. Importantly, regional variability in THg concentrations accentuate the possible roles of fine-scale biotic and abiotic processes that can act to regulate Hg bioaccumulation among individuals and species. (C) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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