4.7 Article

Mercury contamination in forest and freshwater ecosystems in the Northeastern United States

Journal

BIOSCIENCE
Volume 57, Issue 1, Pages 17-28

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1641/B570106

Keywords

atmospheric deposition; bioaccumulation; methylmercury; mercury contamination; northeastern United States

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Eastern North America receives elevated atmospheric mercury deposition from a combination of local, regional, and global sources. Anthropogenic emissions originate largely from electric utilities, incinerators, and industrial processes. The mercury species in these emissions have variable atmospheric residence times, which influence their atmospheric transport and deposition patterns. Forested regions with a prevalence of wetlands and of unproductive surface waters promote high concentrations of mercury in freshwater biota and thus arc particularly sensitive to mercury deposition. Through fish consumption, humans and wildlife are exposed to methylmercury, which markedly bioaccumulates up the freshwater food chain. Average mercury concentrations in yellow perch fillets exceed the Environmental Protection Agency's human health criterion across the region, and mercury concentrations are high enough in piscivorous wildlife to cause adverse behavioral, physiological, and reproductive effects. Initiatives are under way to decrease mercury emissions from electric utilities in the United States by roughly 70%.

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