Evaluating the role of local mercury sources on spatial and temporal pollution trends in marine predators living in a changing arctic

peer reviewed The consequences of a rapidly warming Arctic on environmental mercury (Hg) exposure in marine biota remains largely unknown. Stable carbon (C), nitrogen (N), sulphur (S) and Hg isotope ratios are increasingly used to harmonice and trace Hg sources, pathways and concentrations in marine...

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Main Authors: Pinzone, Marianna, Amouroux, David, Trinquet, A., Loutrage, L, Gan, C., Garvia, J., Munhoz, D., Michel, Loïc, Bérail, S., Tessier, F., Dietz R., Eulaers, I., Nordøy, E.S., Haug, T., Desforges, J.P., Rigét, F.F., Delille, Bruno, Lepoint, Gilles, Das, Krishna
Other Authors: FOCUS - Freshwater and OCeanic science Unit of reSearch - ULiège
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/299629
id ftorbi:oai:orbi.ulg.ac.be:2268/299629
record_format openpolar
spelling ftorbi:oai:orbi.ulg.ac.be:2268/299629 2024-04-21T07:55:59+00:00 Evaluating the role of local mercury sources on spatial and temporal pollution trends in marine predators living in a changing arctic Pinzone, Marianna Amouroux, David Trinquet, A. Loutrage, L Gan, C. Garvia, J. Munhoz, D. Michel, Loïc Bérail, S. Tessier, F. Dietz R., Eulaers, I. Nordøy, E.S. Haug, T. Desforges, J.P. Rigét, F.F. Delille, Bruno Lepoint, Gilles Das, Krishna FOCUS - Freshwater and OCeanic science Unit of reSearch - ULiège 2022-09-22 https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/299629 en eng https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/299629 info:hdl:2268/299629 Diversity of model organisms and model organisms from diversity, Moelcular, Physiological, functional and ecological perspectives, Kortijk, Belgium [BE], 22-23 September 2022 Life sciences Aquatic sciences & oceanology Sciences du vivant Sciences aquatiques & océanologie conference paper not in proceedings http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_18cp info:eu-repo/semantics/conferencePaper peer reviewed 2022 ftorbi 2024-03-27T14:58:04Z peer reviewed The consequences of a rapidly warming Arctic on environmental mercury (Hg) exposure in marine biota remains largely unknown. Stable carbon (C), nitrogen (N), sulphur (S) and Hg isotope ratios are increasingly used to harmonice and trace Hg sources, pathways and concentrations in marine top predators. Our objective was to identify Hg sources in marine Arctic predators at spatial and temporal scale and evaluate the consequences on Hg exposure over time. We measured THg concentrations, C, N, S, and Hg isotope ratios in muscle tissue of hooded Cystophora cristata and ringed seal Pusa hispida from East Greenland, collected between 1985 and 2019. We created multi-isotopic niches (standard ellipse areas, SEAs), after which we applied linear mixed models to relate temporal variation in Hg exposure and sources to environmental change (e.g. sea-ice, NAO). Hooded seals presented a larger SEA (mode, 95% CI: 0.93, 0.60 – 1.41) than ringed seals (mode, 95% CI: 0.22, 0.14 – 0.37). Ringed seals showed higher THg concentrations (Mean ± SD: 1.10 ± 0.48 µg g-1 dw) than hooded seals (0.88 ± 0.92 µg g-1 dw) on average. THg levels in hooded seal muscle decreased by 1.5% y-1, while no significant change was found for ringed seals. At spatial scale, habitat use (oceanic vs. coastal) was the most important driver of THg variability, with landfast ice-associated ringed seals being potentially influenced by enhanced coastal MeHg emission and accumulate higher THg levels. Attemporal scale, the shift in local marine biogeochemistry (represented by δ15N values) and prey biomass were the most important drivers of THg in ringed and hooded seals, respectively. The different Hg trends shown by the two species suggested how Hg sources are important drivers of bioaccumulation in Arctic seals, underling the necessity to reevalute their importance for the forecasting of future Hg trends in the Arctic Ocean. Conference Object Arctic Ocean Cystophora cristata East Greenland Greenland hooded seal Pusa hispida ringed seal Sea ice University of Liège: ORBi (Open Repository and Bibliography)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Liège: ORBi (Open Repository and Bibliography)
op_collection_id ftorbi
language English
topic Life sciences
Aquatic sciences & oceanology
Sciences du vivant
Sciences aquatiques & océanologie
spellingShingle Life sciences
Aquatic sciences & oceanology
Sciences du vivant
Sciences aquatiques & océanologie
Pinzone, Marianna
Amouroux, David
Trinquet, A.
Loutrage, L
Gan, C.
Garvia, J.
Munhoz, D.
Michel, Loïc
Bérail, S.
Tessier, F.
Dietz R.,
Eulaers, I.
Nordøy, E.S.
Haug, T.
Desforges, J.P.
Rigét, F.F.
Delille, Bruno
Lepoint, Gilles
Das, Krishna
Evaluating the role of local mercury sources on spatial and temporal pollution trends in marine predators living in a changing arctic
topic_facet Life sciences
Aquatic sciences & oceanology
Sciences du vivant
Sciences aquatiques & océanologie
description peer reviewed The consequences of a rapidly warming Arctic on environmental mercury (Hg) exposure in marine biota remains largely unknown. Stable carbon (C), nitrogen (N), sulphur (S) and Hg isotope ratios are increasingly used to harmonice and trace Hg sources, pathways and concentrations in marine top predators. Our objective was to identify Hg sources in marine Arctic predators at spatial and temporal scale and evaluate the consequences on Hg exposure over time. We measured THg concentrations, C, N, S, and Hg isotope ratios in muscle tissue of hooded Cystophora cristata and ringed seal Pusa hispida from East Greenland, collected between 1985 and 2019. We created multi-isotopic niches (standard ellipse areas, SEAs), after which we applied linear mixed models to relate temporal variation in Hg exposure and sources to environmental change (e.g. sea-ice, NAO). Hooded seals presented a larger SEA (mode, 95% CI: 0.93, 0.60 – 1.41) than ringed seals (mode, 95% CI: 0.22, 0.14 – 0.37). Ringed seals showed higher THg concentrations (Mean ± SD: 1.10 ± 0.48 µg g-1 dw) than hooded seals (0.88 ± 0.92 µg g-1 dw) on average. THg levels in hooded seal muscle decreased by 1.5% y-1, while no significant change was found for ringed seals. At spatial scale, habitat use (oceanic vs. coastal) was the most important driver of THg variability, with landfast ice-associated ringed seals being potentially influenced by enhanced coastal MeHg emission and accumulate higher THg levels. Attemporal scale, the shift in local marine biogeochemistry (represented by δ15N values) and prey biomass were the most important drivers of THg in ringed and hooded seals, respectively. The different Hg trends shown by the two species suggested how Hg sources are important drivers of bioaccumulation in Arctic seals, underling the necessity to reevalute their importance for the forecasting of future Hg trends in the Arctic Ocean.
author2 FOCUS - Freshwater and OCeanic science Unit of reSearch - ULiège
format Conference Object
author Pinzone, Marianna
Amouroux, David
Trinquet, A.
Loutrage, L
Gan, C.
Garvia, J.
Munhoz, D.
Michel, Loïc
Bérail, S.
Tessier, F.
Dietz R.,
Eulaers, I.
Nordøy, E.S.
Haug, T.
Desforges, J.P.
Rigét, F.F.
Delille, Bruno
Lepoint, Gilles
Das, Krishna
author_facet Pinzone, Marianna
Amouroux, David
Trinquet, A.
Loutrage, L
Gan, C.
Garvia, J.
Munhoz, D.
Michel, Loïc
Bérail, S.
Tessier, F.
Dietz R.,
Eulaers, I.
Nordøy, E.S.
Haug, T.
Desforges, J.P.
Rigét, F.F.
Delille, Bruno
Lepoint, Gilles
Das, Krishna
author_sort Pinzone, Marianna
title Evaluating the role of local mercury sources on spatial and temporal pollution trends in marine predators living in a changing arctic
title_short Evaluating the role of local mercury sources on spatial and temporal pollution trends in marine predators living in a changing arctic
title_full Evaluating the role of local mercury sources on spatial and temporal pollution trends in marine predators living in a changing arctic
title_fullStr Evaluating the role of local mercury sources on spatial and temporal pollution trends in marine predators living in a changing arctic
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating the role of local mercury sources on spatial and temporal pollution trends in marine predators living in a changing arctic
title_sort evaluating the role of local mercury sources on spatial and temporal pollution trends in marine predators living in a changing arctic
publishDate 2022
url https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/299629
genre Arctic Ocean
Cystophora cristata
East Greenland
Greenland
hooded seal
Pusa hispida
ringed seal
Sea ice
genre_facet Arctic Ocean
Cystophora cristata
East Greenland
Greenland
hooded seal
Pusa hispida
ringed seal
Sea ice
op_source Diversity of model organisms and model organisms from diversity, Moelcular, Physiological, functional and ecological perspectives, Kortijk, Belgium [BE], 22-23 September 2022
op_relation https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/299629
info:hdl:2268/299629
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