4.8 Article

Toward a Global Model of Methylmercury Biomagnification in Marine Food Webs: Trophic Dynamics and Implications for Human Exposure

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages 6563-6572

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.3c012996563

Keywords

methylmercury; biomagnification; food webs; feeding interactions; human exposure; MITgcm; FEISTY

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This study combines a fish ecological model and an ocean methylmercury model to explore the factors and mechanisms of methylmercury transfer in marine fish food webs. The results show that the available methylmercury in zooplankton strongly affects the methylmercury content in fish, and medium-sized fish are critical intermediaries in transferring methylmercury in the food webs. Feeding interactions influenced by ecosystem structures determine the degree of methylmercury biomagnification. It is estimated that the global population potentially consumes 6.1 metric tons of methylmercury per year through marine fish consumption. This model provides a useful tool for quantifying human exposure to methylmercury through marine fish consumption and fills a critical gap in the effectiveness evaluation of the convention.
Marine fish is an excellent source of nutrition but also contributes the most to human exposure to methylmercury (MMHg), a neurotoxicant that poses significant risks to human health on a global scale and is regulated by the Minamata Convention. To better predict human exposure to MMHg, it is important to understand the trophic transfer of MMHg in the global marine food webs, which remains largely unknown, especially in the upper trophic level (TL) biota that is more directly relevant to human exposure. In this study, we couple a fish ecological model and an ocean methylmercury model to explore the influencing factors and mechanisms of MMHg transfer in marine fish food webs. Our results show that available MMHg in the zooplankton strongly determines the MMHg in fish. Medium-sized fish are critical intermediaries that transfer more than 70% of the MMHg circulating in food webs. Grazing is the main factor to control MMHg concentrations in different size categories of fish. Feeding interactions affected by ecosystem structures determine the degree of MMHg biomagnification. We estimate a total of 6.1 metric tons of MMHg potentially digested by the global population per year through marine fish consumption. The model provides a useful tool to quantify human exposure to MMHg through marine fish consumption and thus fills a critical gap in the effectiveness evaluation of the convention.

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