4.7 Article

Mercury bioaccumulation in bats reflects dietary connectivity to aquatic food webs

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 233, Issue -, Pages 1076-1085

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2017.10.010

Keywords

Chiroptera; Ecotoxicology; Feeding guild; Phylogenetic comparative analysis; Trophic level; Trophic transfer

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship
  2. ARCS Foundation Award
  3. Sigma Xi
  4. Odum School of Ecology
  5. University of Georgia Graduate School
  6. Explorer's Club
  7. University of Georgia Biomedical and Health Sciences Institute
  8. Texas Christian University Research and Creative Activities Fund Award
  9. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Discovery Grant
  10. Yawkey Foundation
  11. Clemson University
  12. Wildlife Conservation Society
  13. American Museum of Natural History Taxonomic Mammalogy Fund

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Mercury (Hg) is a persistent and widespread heavy metal with neurotoxic effects in wildlife. While bioaccumulation of Hg has historically been studied in aquatic food webs, terrestrial consumers can become contaminated with Hg when they feed on aquatic organisms (e.g., emergent aquatic insects, fish, and amphibians). However, the extent to which dietary connectivity to aquatic ecosystems can explain patterns of Hg bioaccumulation in terrestrial consumers has not been well studied. Bats (Order: Chiroptera) can serve as a model system for illuminating the trophic transfer of Hg given their high dietary diversity and foraging links to both aquatic and terrestrial food webs. Here we quantitatively characterize the dietary correlates of long-term exposure to Hg across a diverse local assemblage of bats in Belize and more globally across bat species from around the world with a comparative analysis of hair samples. Our data demonstrate considerable interspecific variation in hair total Hg concentrations in bats that span three orders of magnitude across species, ranging from 0.04 mg/kg in frugivorous bats (Artibeus spp.) to 145.27 mg/kg in the piscivorous Noctilio leporinus. Hg concentrations showed strong phylogenetic signal and were best explained by dietary connectivity of bat species to aquatic food webs. Our results highlight that phylogeny can be predictive of Hg concentrations through similarity in diet and how interspecific variation in feeding strategies influences chronic exposure to Hg and enables movement of contaminants from aquatic to terrestrial ecosystems. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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