4.3 Article

Mercury distribution in an Upper St. Lawrence River wetland dominated by cattail (Typha angustifolia)

Journal

WETLANDS
Volume 41, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s13157-021-01511-9

Keywords

Bioaccumulation; Biomass; Mercury; Typha; Wetland

Funding

  1. Great Lakes Research Consortium (New York)
  2. National Science Foundation Research Experience for Undergraduates program (NSF Award) [1659623]
  3. Div Of Engineering Education and Centers
  4. Directorate For Engineering [1659623] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Legacy mercury in Upper St. Lawrence River wetland hydric soils is mainly affected by a new water level management plan, potentially altering the distribution of mercury within plant communities. Organic detritus is found to contribute the most to the overall mercury burden in these wetlands.
Legacy mercury (Hg) exists in Upper St. Lawrence River wetland hydric soils and is impacted by a new water level management plan (established in 2017) implemented to restore biodiversity and reduce the monotypic nature of riparian wetlands, currently dominated by Typha spp.. The distribution of Hg within the various components of a riparian wetland provides insight into potential impacts of water level fluctuations. Hydric soil represents 83% of the wetland Hg burden while wetland plant biomass contributed 17%, mostly due to organic detritus (13%). Although Typha roots had a bioconcentration factor of 1.2 (relative to hydric soils) and had the highest total Hg among living tissues (25 +/- 9.3 ng/g dry wt.), detritus had the highest overall Hg content (110 +/- 53 ng/g dry wt.). While root tissue Hg correlated significantly with soil Hg (p = 0.045), it was determined here that Typha spp. has limited use as a biomonitor in wetlands with low levels of Hg contamination, as in this ecosystem. Hg contained within the organic detritus contributed more to the overall Hg burden in these monotypic Typha wetlands than any other tissue or biomass component analyzed. Consequently, shifts in the plant community that are expected to result from a new water level management plan may alter Hg storage within these wetlands and affect its mobility in this ecosystem.

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