Litcius/Paper detail

Mercury isotopes identify near-surface marine mercury in deep-sea trench biota

Joel D. Blum, Jeffrey C. Drazen, Marcus W. Johnson, Brian N. Popp, Laura C. Motta, Alan J. Jamieson

2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences65 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Significance Mercury is a globally distributed neurotoxic pollutant that can be biomagnified in marine fish to levels that are harmful for consumption by humans and other animals. The degree to which mercury has infiltrated the oceans yields important information on the biogeochemistry of mercury and its expected effects on fisheries during changing mercury emissions scenarios. Mercury isotope measurement of biota from deep-sea trenches was used to demonstrate that surface-ocean-derived mercury has infiltrated the deepest locations in the oceans. It was found that when fish living in the surface ocean die and their carcasses sink (along with marine particles), they transfer large amounts of mercury to the trench foodwebs leading to high concentrations of mercury in trench biota.

Topics & Concepts

Mercury (programming language)BiotaTrenchEnvironmental scienceIsotopeOceanographyEnvironmental chemistryGeologyChemistryEcologyBiologyOrganic chemistryPhysicsLayer (electronics)Computer scienceQuantum mechanicsProgramming languageMercury impact and mitigation studiesMarine animal studies overviewIsotope Analysis in Ecology