Reconsideration of marine bivalves as mercury biomonitoring tool: a national isotopic survey along the coast of South Korea.

editorial reviewed Coastal sediments act as a reservoir for inorganic and organic contaminants. Among them, mercury (Hg), a toxic and bioaccumulative heavy metal, is efficiently transferred from sediment to marine biota and ultimately to humans via fisheries consumption. Marine bivalves have been re...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Besnard, Lucien, Ra Kongtae, Lepoint, Gilles, Jung Saebom, Kwon Sae Yun
Other Authors: FOCUS - Freshwater and OCeanic science Unit of reSearch - ULiège BE
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/308189
https://orbi.uliege.be/bitstream/2268/308189/1/Reconsideration%20of%20marine%20bivalves%20as%20mercury%20biomonitoring%20tool_%20a%20national%20isotopic%20survey%20along%20the%20coast%20of%20South%20Korea.pdf
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Summary:editorial reviewed Coastal sediments act as a reservoir for inorganic and organic contaminants. Among them, mercury (Hg), a toxic and bioaccumulative heavy metal, is efficiently transferred from sediment to marine biota and ultimately to humans via fisheries consumption. Marine bivalves have been recognized as an effective bioindicator for sediment pollution as their suspension or deposit feeding behaviors are physically and chemically tied to the sediment. Due to their broad geographic distribution, bivalve-based monitoring programs, known as the ‘Mussel Watch’, had been developed around the world including South Korea. However, due to multiple natural and anthropogenic Hg sources, absence of significant Hg relationships between bivalves and sediment have been reported in coastal regions. To investigate bivalve Hg sources and efficiency as coastal sediment Hg bioindicators, paired sediment and bivalves (blue mussel, Mytilus edulis, and Pacific oyster, Magallana gigas) were sampled in 50 coastal sites in South Korea and measured for total Hg (THg) concentration and Hg isotope ratios. Sediment THg varied from 0.7 to 195.7 ng·g-1, except for two highly contaminated sites at Pohang (600.1 ng·g-1) and Onsan (1417.9 ng·g-1). Bivalve THg ranged between 21.1 and 225.2 ng·g-1 and was not correlated with sediment THg (linear regression, R²=0.01, p>0.05). Only a handful of studies have compared Hg isotope ratios between bivalves and sediment and observed isotopic differences (mainly δ202Hg values) were either attributed to biogeochemical processes occurring in the different fractions of the sediment prior to exposure or to the preferential accumulation of dissolved Hg from the water column by bivalves [1,2]. Based on these identified shifts, Hg isotope ratios are used to identify biogeochemical and/or ecological factors dictating the extent of sediment Hg bioaccumulation to bivalves. Finally, we further plan to quantify carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur isotopes to assess the importance of species feeding behavior and ...