Biogeochemical processes accounting for the natural mercury variations in the Southern Ocean diatom ooze sediments

Due to its toxic nature and its high potential for biomagnification, mercury is a pollutant of concern. Understanding the marine biogeochemical cycle of mercury is crucial as consumption of mercury-enriched marine fish is the most important pathway of human exposure to monomethylmercury, a neurotoxi...

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Published in:Ocean Science
Main Authors: Zaferani, Sara, Biester, Harald
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Copernicus 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/os-16-729-2020
https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:gbv:084-2020061915029
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author Zaferani, Sara
Biester, Harald
author_facet Zaferani, Sara
Biester, Harald
author_sort Zaferani, Sara
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description Due to its toxic nature and its high potential for biomagnification, mercury is a pollutant of concern. Understanding the marine biogeochemical cycle of mercury is crucial as consumption of mercury-enriched marine fish is the most important pathway of human exposure to monomethylmercury, a neurotoxin. However, due to the lack of long-term marine records, the role of the oceans in the global mercury cycle is poorly understood. We do not have well-documented data of natural mercury accumulations during changing environmental conditions, e.g., sea surface conditions in the ocean. To understand the influence of different sea surface conditions (climate-induced changes in ice coverage and biological production) on natural mercury accumulation, we used a continuous ∼170 m Holocene biogenic sedimentary record from Adélie Basin, East Antarctica, which mainly consists of silica-based skeletons of diatoms. We performed principal component analysis and regression analysis on element concentrations and corresponding residuals, respectively, to investigate the link between sediment mercury accumulation, terrestrial inputs, and phytoplankton productivity. Preindustrial mercury in the remote marine basin shows extremely high accumulation rates (median: 556 µg m−2 yr−1) that displayed periodic-like variations. Our analyses show that the variations in total mercury concentrations and accumulation rates are associated with biological production and related scavenging of water-phase mercury by rapidly sinking algae or algae-derived organic matter after intense algae blooms. High accumulation rates of other major and trace elements further reveal that, in regions of high primary productivity, settling of biogenic materials removes a large fraction of dissolved or particulate-bound elements from the free water phase through scavenging or biological uptake. The link between mercury cycling and primary production will need to be considered in future studies of the marine mercury cycle under primary production enhancement through ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
East Antarctica
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
East Antarctica
Southern Ocean
geographic East Antarctica
Southern Ocean
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Southern Ocean
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spelling ftunivbraunschw:oai:https://leopard.tu-braunschweig.de/:dbbs_mods_00068751 2025-01-16T19:36:04+00:00 Biogeochemical processes accounting for the natural mercury variations in the Southern Ocean diatom ooze sediments Zaferani, Sara Biester, Harald 2020-06-19 13 Seiten https://doi.org/10.5194/os-16-729-2020 https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:gbv:084-2020061915029 https://leopard.tu-braunschweig.de/receive/dbbs_mods_00068751 https://leopard.tu-braunschweig.de/servlets/MCRZipServlet/dbbs_derivate_00047458 http://publikationsserver.tu-braunschweig.de/get/68751 eng eng Copernicus https://doi.org/10.5194/os-16-729-2020 https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:gbv:084-2020061915029 https://leopard.tu-braunschweig.de/receive/dbbs_mods_00068751 https://leopard.tu-braunschweig.de/servlets/MCRZipServlet/dbbs_derivate_00047458 http://publikationsserver.tu-braunschweig.de/get/68751 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ public info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Ocean Science, Vol. 16, issue 3, 729–741, 2020 https://doi.org/10.5194/os-16-729-2020 -- OceanSci. -- 1812-0784 Article ddc:55 Veröffentlichung der TU Braunschweig Publikationsfonds der TU Braunschweig article Text doc-type:article 2020 ftunivbraunschw https://doi.org/10.5194/os-16-729-2020 2024-04-02T14:07:32Z Due to its toxic nature and its high potential for biomagnification, mercury is a pollutant of concern. Understanding the marine biogeochemical cycle of mercury is crucial as consumption of mercury-enriched marine fish is the most important pathway of human exposure to monomethylmercury, a neurotoxin. However, due to the lack of long-term marine records, the role of the oceans in the global mercury cycle is poorly understood. We do not have well-documented data of natural mercury accumulations during changing environmental conditions, e.g., sea surface conditions in the ocean. To understand the influence of different sea surface conditions (climate-induced changes in ice coverage and biological production) on natural mercury accumulation, we used a continuous ∼170 m Holocene biogenic sedimentary record from Adélie Basin, East Antarctica, which mainly consists of silica-based skeletons of diatoms. We performed principal component analysis and regression analysis on element concentrations and corresponding residuals, respectively, to investigate the link between sediment mercury accumulation, terrestrial inputs, and phytoplankton productivity. Preindustrial mercury in the remote marine basin shows extremely high accumulation rates (median: 556 µg m−2 yr−1) that displayed periodic-like variations. Our analyses show that the variations in total mercury concentrations and accumulation rates are associated with biological production and related scavenging of water-phase mercury by rapidly sinking algae or algae-derived organic matter after intense algae blooms. High accumulation rates of other major and trace elements further reveal that, in regions of high primary productivity, settling of biogenic materials removes a large fraction of dissolved or particulate-bound elements from the free water phase through scavenging or biological uptake. The link between mercury cycling and primary production will need to be considered in future studies of the marine mercury cycle under primary production enhancement through ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctica East Antarctica Southern Ocean TU Braunschweig: LeoPARD - Publications And Research Data East Antarctica Southern Ocean Ocean Science 16 3 729 741
spellingShingle Article
ddc:55
Veröffentlichung der TU Braunschweig
Publikationsfonds der TU Braunschweig
Zaferani, Sara
Biester, Harald
Biogeochemical processes accounting for the natural mercury variations in the Southern Ocean diatom ooze sediments
title Biogeochemical processes accounting for the natural mercury variations in the Southern Ocean diatom ooze sediments
title_full Biogeochemical processes accounting for the natural mercury variations in the Southern Ocean diatom ooze sediments
title_fullStr Biogeochemical processes accounting for the natural mercury variations in the Southern Ocean diatom ooze sediments
title_full_unstemmed Biogeochemical processes accounting for the natural mercury variations in the Southern Ocean diatom ooze sediments
title_short Biogeochemical processes accounting for the natural mercury variations in the Southern Ocean diatom ooze sediments
title_sort biogeochemical processes accounting for the natural mercury variations in the southern ocean diatom ooze sediments
topic Article
ddc:55
Veröffentlichung der TU Braunschweig
Publikationsfonds der TU Braunschweig
topic_facet Article
ddc:55
Veröffentlichung der TU Braunschweig
Publikationsfonds der TU Braunschweig
url https://doi.org/10.5194/os-16-729-2020
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