4.7 Article

Enhanced mercury reduction in the South Atlantic Ocean during carbon remineralization

Journal

MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN
Volume 178, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2022.113644

Keywords

Mercury; Dissolved gaseous mercury; Dissolved inorganic carbon; South Atlantic Ocean; Organic matter remineralization

Funding

  1. Slovenian Research Agency [P1-0143, PR-06179, J1-8156, J1-3033-1]
  2. European Commission [FP7-265113 - GMOS, 689443 - ERA-PLANET, 16ENV01 - MercOx]
  3. UK Natural Environment Research Council [NE/H006095/1, NE/H00475/1 - UK-GEOTRACES]
  4. National Research Council of Italy
  5. Croatian Science Foundation [IP-2014-09-4143 - MICROGLOB, IP-2014-09-3606 - MARIPLAN]

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The speciation of mercury in the South Atlantic Ocean was investigated, and it was found that methylated mercury concentrations were related to seawater temperature, salinity, and fluorescence, while dissolved gaseous mercury concentrations were related to water column depth, macronutrient concentrations, and dissolved inorganic carbon. The linear correlation observed between dissolved gaseous mercury and dissolved inorganic carbon suggests possible production of dissolved gaseous mercury through organic matter remineralization.
Mercury (Hg) in seawater is subject to interconversions via (photo)chemical and (micro)biological processes that determine the extent of dissolved gaseous mercury (DGM) (re)emission and the production of monomethylmercury. We investigated Hg speciation in the South Atlantic Ocean on a GEOTRACES cruise along a 40 degrees S section between December 2011 and January 2012 (354 samples collected at 24 stations from surface to 5250 m maximum depth). Using statistical analysis, concentrations of methylated mercury (MeHg, geometric mean 35.4 fmol L-1) were related to seawater temperature, salinity, and fluorescence. DGM concentrations (geometric mean 0.17 pmol L-1) were related to water column depth, concentrations of macronutrients and dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC). The first-ever observed linear correlation between DGM and DIC obtained from high-resolution data indicates possible DGM production by organic matter remineralization via biological or dark abiotic reactions. DGM concentrations projected from literature DIC data using the newly discovered DGM-DIC relationship agreed with published DGM observations.

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