MERCURY CONCENTRATIONS IN SALMONIDS FROM WESTERN U.S. NATIONAL PARKS AND RELATIONSHIPS WITH AGE AND MACROPHAGE AGGREGATES

Mercury accumulation in aquatic foodwebs and its effects on aquatic biota are of growing concern both for the health of the fish and the piscivores that prey upon them. This is of particular concern for western U.S. National Parks because it is known that mountainous and Arctic areas are sinks for s...

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Main Authors: ADAM SCHWINDT, JOHN FOURNIE, DIXON LANDERS, CARL SCHRECK, MICHAEL KENT
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: 2008
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Online Access:http://oaspub.epa.gov/eims/eimsapi.dispdetail?deid=175543
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spelling ftepa:oai:epaEIMS:175543 2023-05-15T15:06:45+02:00 MERCURY CONCENTRATIONS IN SALMONIDS FROM WESTERN U.S. NATIONAL PARKS AND RELATIONSHIPS WITH AGE AND MACROPHAGE AGGREGATES ADAM SCHWINDT JOHN FOURNIE DIXON LANDERS CARL SCHRECK MICHAEL KENT 2008-04-17T20:34:05Z http://oaspub.epa.gov/eims/eimsapi.dispdetail?deid=175543 unknown http://pubs.acs.org/cgi-bin/article.cgi/esthag/2008/42/i04/html/es702337m.html NATIONAL HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS RESEARCH LABORATORY Text 2008 ftepa 2008-07-24T00:24:35Z Mercury accumulation in aquatic foodwebs and its effects on aquatic biota are of growing concern both for the health of the fish and the piscivores that prey upon them. This is of particular concern for western U.S. National Parks because it is known that mountainous and Arctic areas are sinks for some contaminants. The Western Airborne Contaminants Assessment Project seeks, in part, to ascertain mercury concentrations and evaluate effects of contaminants on biota in 14 lakes from 8 National Parks or Preserves. In this paper we report that mercury has accumulated to concentrations in trout that may negatively impact some piscivorous wildlife, indicating potential terrestrial ecosystem effects. Additionally, we show that mercury concentrations increase with age in 4 species of trout, providing evidence of bioaccumulation. Finally, we demonstrate that mercury is associated with tissue damage in the kidney and spleen, as indicated by increases in macrophage aggregates. This finding suggests that mercury, and possibly other contaminants, are negatively affecting the trout that inhabit these remote and protected ecosystems. Our results indicate that mercury is indeed a concern for the U.S. National Parks, from an organismic and potentially an ecosystem perspective. Text Arctic Environmental Protection Agency (EPA): Science Inventory Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Environmental Protection Agency (EPA): Science Inventory
op_collection_id ftepa
language unknown
description Mercury accumulation in aquatic foodwebs and its effects on aquatic biota are of growing concern both for the health of the fish and the piscivores that prey upon them. This is of particular concern for western U.S. National Parks because it is known that mountainous and Arctic areas are sinks for some contaminants. The Western Airborne Contaminants Assessment Project seeks, in part, to ascertain mercury concentrations and evaluate effects of contaminants on biota in 14 lakes from 8 National Parks or Preserves. In this paper we report that mercury has accumulated to concentrations in trout that may negatively impact some piscivorous wildlife, indicating potential terrestrial ecosystem effects. Additionally, we show that mercury concentrations increase with age in 4 species of trout, providing evidence of bioaccumulation. Finally, we demonstrate that mercury is associated with tissue damage in the kidney and spleen, as indicated by increases in macrophage aggregates. This finding suggests that mercury, and possibly other contaminants, are negatively affecting the trout that inhabit these remote and protected ecosystems. Our results indicate that mercury is indeed a concern for the U.S. National Parks, from an organismic and potentially an ecosystem perspective.
format Text
author ADAM SCHWINDT
JOHN FOURNIE
DIXON LANDERS
CARL SCHRECK
MICHAEL KENT
spellingShingle ADAM SCHWINDT
JOHN FOURNIE
DIXON LANDERS
CARL SCHRECK
MICHAEL KENT
MERCURY CONCENTRATIONS IN SALMONIDS FROM WESTERN U.S. NATIONAL PARKS AND RELATIONSHIPS WITH AGE AND MACROPHAGE AGGREGATES
author_facet ADAM SCHWINDT
JOHN FOURNIE
DIXON LANDERS
CARL SCHRECK
MICHAEL KENT
author_sort ADAM SCHWINDT
title MERCURY CONCENTRATIONS IN SALMONIDS FROM WESTERN U.S. NATIONAL PARKS AND RELATIONSHIPS WITH AGE AND MACROPHAGE AGGREGATES
title_short MERCURY CONCENTRATIONS IN SALMONIDS FROM WESTERN U.S. NATIONAL PARKS AND RELATIONSHIPS WITH AGE AND MACROPHAGE AGGREGATES
title_full MERCURY CONCENTRATIONS IN SALMONIDS FROM WESTERN U.S. NATIONAL PARKS AND RELATIONSHIPS WITH AGE AND MACROPHAGE AGGREGATES
title_fullStr MERCURY CONCENTRATIONS IN SALMONIDS FROM WESTERN U.S. NATIONAL PARKS AND RELATIONSHIPS WITH AGE AND MACROPHAGE AGGREGATES
title_full_unstemmed MERCURY CONCENTRATIONS IN SALMONIDS FROM WESTERN U.S. NATIONAL PARKS AND RELATIONSHIPS WITH AGE AND MACROPHAGE AGGREGATES
title_sort mercury concentrations in salmonids from western u.s. national parks and relationships with age and macrophage aggregates
publishDate 2008
url http://oaspub.epa.gov/eims/eimsapi.dispdetail?deid=175543
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_source NATIONAL HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS RESEARCH LABORATORY
op_relation http://pubs.acs.org/cgi-bin/article.cgi/esthag/2008/42/i04/html/es702337m.html
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