4.8 Article

A risk assessment of the effects of mercury on Baltic Sea, Greater North Sea and North Atlantic wildlife, fish and bivalves

期刊

ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL
卷 146, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2020.106178

关键词

Biological effect; Hg; Marine mammal; Seabird; Bird of prey; Risk threshold

资金

  1. Innovation Fund Denmark [6180-00001B, 618000002B]
  2. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research [FKZ 03F0767A]
  3. Academy of Finland [311966]
  4. Swedish Foundation for Strategic Environmental Research (MISTRA)
  5. French National Agency for Scientific Research [MAMBA ANR-16TERC-0004, ILETOP ANR-16-CE34-0005]
  6. French Polar Institute [Pgr 388 ADACLIM]
  7. French Arctic Initiative -CNRS (PARCS project)
  8. European Commission [FP7-CIG 631203 ARCTOX]
  9. BONUS BALTHEALTH project
  10. BONUS (Art. 185)
  11. EU
  12. Forschungszentrum Julich GmbH

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study found that species in the Baltic Sea have shown significant improvements in terms of Hg exposure over the past few decades, although they still carry a legacy of high mercury levels. However, the estimated risk for Baltic populations is not considerably higher compared to the same species in adjacent waters.
A wide range of species, including marine mammals, seabirds, birds of prey, fish and bivalves, were investigated for potential population health risks resulting from contemporary (post 2000) mercury (Hg) exposure, using novel risk thresholds based on literature and de novo contamination data. The main geographic focus is on the Baltic Sea, while data from the same species in adjacent waters, such as the Greater North Sea and North Atlantic, were included for comparative purposes. For marine mammals, 23% of the groups, each composing individuals of a specific sex and maturity from the same species in a specific study region, showed Hg-concentrations within the High Risk Category (HRC) and Severe Risk Category (SRC). The corresponding percentages for seabirds, fish and bivalves were 2.7%, 25% and 8.0%, respectively, although fish and bivalves were not represented in the SRC. Juveniles from all species showed to be at no or low risk. In comparison to the same species in the adjacent waters, i.e. the Greater North Sea and the North Atlantic, the estimated risk for Baltic populations is not considerably higher. These findings suggest that over the past few decades the Baltic Sea has improved considerably with respect to presenting Hg exposure to its local species, while it does still carry a legacy of elevated Hg levels resulting from high neighbouring industrial and agricultural activity and slow water turnover regime.

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