Mercury cycling and human health concerns in remote ecosystems in the Americas

Fish constitutes a praised—and sometimes irreplaceable—component of the daily diet for numerous communities throughout the Americas. These populations can be exposed to mercury (Hg)—ubiquitous in fish flesh—to levels potentially harmful to their health. Mercury is subjected to various chemical trans...

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Main Authors: Canuel, René, Lucotte, Marc, Grosbois, Sylvie Boucher de
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Institut Veolia 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/sapiens/766
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spelling ftopenedition:oai:revues.org:sapiens/766 2023-05-15T15:15:07+02:00 Mercury cycling and human health concerns in remote ecosystems in the Americas Canuel, René Lucotte, Marc Grosbois, Sylvie Boucher de 2009-05-13 http://journals.openedition.org/sapiens/766 en eng Institut Veolia S.A.P.I.EN.S info:eu-repo/semantics/reference/issn/1993-3800 info:eu-repo/semantics/reference/issn/1993-3819 http://journals.openedition.org/sapiens/766 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess fish consumption land use management Mercury mercury depletion events methylmercury info:eu-repo/semantics/article article 2009 ftopenedition 2020-10-25T00:19:03Z Fish constitutes a praised—and sometimes irreplaceable—component of the daily diet for numerous communities throughout the Americas. These populations can be exposed to mercury (Hg)—ubiquitous in fish flesh—to levels potentially harmful to their health. Mercury is subjected to various chemical transformations once released to the environment. From diffuse loading on land and waters to accumulation in the aquatic food web, this paper draws a general picture of the main processes influencing the Hg cycle in different ecozones. Contrarily to other pollutants, the amount of Hg found in fish tissues is not clearly related to the extent of Hg loading in a given ecosystem. In the Arctic, the sudden stripping of gaseous elemental Hg from the atmosphere—known as the Hg depletion events—and its subsequent transformation into methylmercury (MeHg) seems to be one of the driving force behind Hg accumulation in freshwater aquatic organisms and marine mammals. In boreal environments, numerous watershed-based processes influence the transport and methylation of Hg deposited from atmospheric source and selectively control the amount of MeHg transferred from source to fish. In the tropics, small-scale gold mining operations have induced the release of considerable amount of Hg to the environment. However, the extensive deforestation of the tropical forest and the subsequent erosion and lixiviation of land-deposited Hg down to tropical rivers appears to have a greater impact on the observed wide-scale fish Hg contamination. Mercury accumulation in remote ecosystems do represent a significant and complex environmental issue, considering: (a) the high levels of Hg monitored in fish and marine mammals flesh; (b) the large-scale occurrence of such worrying Hg bioaccumulation patterns; (c) the extensive use of aquatic resources by numerous remote communities; (d) the fact that this issue shall persist at least on the mid-term, even if strong measures are taken to lessen Hg anthropogenic loadings to the global atmosphere. Although there ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Human health OpenEdition Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection OpenEdition
op_collection_id ftopenedition
language English
topic fish consumption
land use management
Mercury
mercury depletion events
methylmercury
spellingShingle fish consumption
land use management
Mercury
mercury depletion events
methylmercury
Canuel, René
Lucotte, Marc
Grosbois, Sylvie Boucher de
Mercury cycling and human health concerns in remote ecosystems in the Americas
topic_facet fish consumption
land use management
Mercury
mercury depletion events
methylmercury
description Fish constitutes a praised—and sometimes irreplaceable—component of the daily diet for numerous communities throughout the Americas. These populations can be exposed to mercury (Hg)—ubiquitous in fish flesh—to levels potentially harmful to their health. Mercury is subjected to various chemical transformations once released to the environment. From diffuse loading on land and waters to accumulation in the aquatic food web, this paper draws a general picture of the main processes influencing the Hg cycle in different ecozones. Contrarily to other pollutants, the amount of Hg found in fish tissues is not clearly related to the extent of Hg loading in a given ecosystem. In the Arctic, the sudden stripping of gaseous elemental Hg from the atmosphere—known as the Hg depletion events—and its subsequent transformation into methylmercury (MeHg) seems to be one of the driving force behind Hg accumulation in freshwater aquatic organisms and marine mammals. In boreal environments, numerous watershed-based processes influence the transport and methylation of Hg deposited from atmospheric source and selectively control the amount of MeHg transferred from source to fish. In the tropics, small-scale gold mining operations have induced the release of considerable amount of Hg to the environment. However, the extensive deforestation of the tropical forest and the subsequent erosion and lixiviation of land-deposited Hg down to tropical rivers appears to have a greater impact on the observed wide-scale fish Hg contamination. Mercury accumulation in remote ecosystems do represent a significant and complex environmental issue, considering: (a) the high levels of Hg monitored in fish and marine mammals flesh; (b) the large-scale occurrence of such worrying Hg bioaccumulation patterns; (c) the extensive use of aquatic resources by numerous remote communities; (d) the fact that this issue shall persist at least on the mid-term, even if strong measures are taken to lessen Hg anthropogenic loadings to the global atmosphere. Although there ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Canuel, René
Lucotte, Marc
Grosbois, Sylvie Boucher de
author_facet Canuel, René
Lucotte, Marc
Grosbois, Sylvie Boucher de
author_sort Canuel, René
title Mercury cycling and human health concerns in remote ecosystems in the Americas
title_short Mercury cycling and human health concerns in remote ecosystems in the Americas
title_full Mercury cycling and human health concerns in remote ecosystems in the Americas
title_fullStr Mercury cycling and human health concerns in remote ecosystems in the Americas
title_full_unstemmed Mercury cycling and human health concerns in remote ecosystems in the Americas
title_sort mercury cycling and human health concerns in remote ecosystems in the americas
publisher Institut Veolia
publishDate 2009
url http://journals.openedition.org/sapiens/766
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Human health
genre_facet Arctic
Human health
op_relation info:eu-repo/semantics/reference/issn/1993-3800
info:eu-repo/semantics/reference/issn/1993-3819
http://journals.openedition.org/sapiens/766
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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