4.6 Article

Mercury in soil, sediment, and lake water in upland headwater catchments in Ireland

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL EARTH SCIENCES
Volume 81, Issue 20, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12665-022-10618-z

Keywords

Normalized mercury; Organic carbon; Acid-sensitive; Dissolved organic carbon; Atmospheric mercury

Funding

  1. Irish Environmental Protection Agency under the Climate Change Research Programme (CCRP) [2016-CCRP-MS.43]
  2. Environmental Protection Agency Ireland (EPA) [2016-CCRP-MS.43] Funding Source: Environmental Protection Agency Ireland (EPA)

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Mercury concentrations in the atmosphere, surface waters, and soils have increased beyond natural levels due to human activities. This study investigated the interlinkages between mercury concentrations in soils, lake sediment, and lake water in remote upland acid-sensitive catchments. The results suggest that catchment soils are the main driver of variation in mercury concentrations in lake water and sediment in upland regions in Ireland.
Mercury concentrations in the atmosphere, surface waters, and soils have increased beyond natural levels as a result of human activities, which poses a risk to human and environmental health. Ireland is situated on the western periphery of Europe, and it is generally assumed that environmental mercury is low but there is limited information on mercury within natural environments. In this study, the interlinkages in the concentration of mercury in soils, lake sediment, and lake water were investigated in remote upland acid-sensitive catchments influenced by low deposition of atmospheric mercury. Thirty-one upland lake catchments were sampled for topsoil, lake sediment, and lake water during 2017-2018. Total mercury (THg) concentrations in water (median 5.4 ng/L) and sediment (median 30 ng/g) were low, owing to the remote location of the lakes. In contrast, THg in catchment soil was relatively high for a background region (median: 240 ng/g), which was attributed to the high organic matter content of the soil (median 87%). The results suggest catchment soils are the dominant driver of variation in THg in lake water and sediment in upland regions in Ireland. Further, given that highly organic soils can obscure interlinkages within catchments, this study demonstrated the value of exploring mercury independent of the influence of organic matter, i.e., THg normalized by organic carbon. As global action (such as the Minamata Convention) decreases mercury emissions, legacy soil mercury may become a more important input to aquatic systems than atmospheric deposition, which makes the relationships between terrestrial catchments and their water bodies vital for our understanding of mercury cycling.

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