Organic carbon, mercury and climate change: towards a better understanding of biotic contamination in the Canadian Arctic

Mercury (Hg) is a known neurotoxin that is often found in concentrations exceeding safe consumption guidelines in aquatic biota. This is evident in northern Canada, where northerners consume significant amounts of animals such as beluga, seals and burbot. In the Mackenzie River Basin, recent increas...

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Main Author: Carrie, Jesse D.
Other Authors: Wang, Feiyue (Environment & Geography) Stern, Gary (Environment & Geography), Papakyriakou, Tim (Environment & Geography) Macdonald, Robie (Environment & Geography) Halden, Norman (Geological Science) Gobeil, Charles (Institut National de Recherche Scientifique)
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3923
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spelling ftunivmanitoba:oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/3923 2023-06-18T03:38:35+02:00 Organic carbon, mercury and climate change: towards a better understanding of biotic contamination in the Canadian Arctic Carrie, Jesse D. Wang, Feiyue (Environment & Geography) Stern, Gary (Environment & Geography) Papakyriakou, Tim (Environment & Geography) Macdonald, Robie (Environment & Geography) Halden, Norman (Geological Science) Gobeil, Charles (Institut National de Recherche Scientifique) 2010-04-08T20:04:18Z 50548251 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3923 eng eng Carrie, J., Sanei, H., Goodarzi, F., Stern, G., Wang, F. (2009) Characterization of organic matter in surface sediments of the Mackenzie River Basin, Canada, International Journal of Coal Geology 77:416-423. Carrie, J., Stern, G., Sanei, H., Macdonald, R., Outridge, P., Wang, F. (2010) Increasing contaminant burdens in an Arctic fish, burbot (lota lota), in a warming climate, Environmental Science & Technology 44: 316-322. http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3923 open access mercury Mackenzie River Arctic organic matter burbot climate change doctoral thesis 2010 ftunivmanitoba 2023-06-04T17:43:00Z Mercury (Hg) is a known neurotoxin that is often found in concentrations exceeding safe consumption guidelines in aquatic biota. This is evident in northern Canada, where northerners consume significant amounts of animals such as beluga, seals and burbot. In the Mackenzie River Basin, recent increases in Hg concentration in many of these animals over the past 25 years have been observed. The warming climate, and with it, the changing carbon cycle, are hypothesised in this thesis to play a role in the increases. Within the context of the two major zones (mountainous and peatland), with distinct geomorphology, hydrology and geology, traditional fossil fuel exploration methods (Rock-Eval pyrolysis, organic petrography) have been employed in a novel manner on recent sediments to qualify and quantify the OM and several geochemical analyses have been used to determine the geochemical sources of Hg. The mountainous zone is composed mostly of refractory OM, from forest fire char and heavily reworked OM. It also contains, and fluxes, most of the Hg, which derives from oxidative weathering and erosion of widespread sulfide minerals. However, Hg from this zone is in chemical forms of limited bioavailability. The peatland zone has a greater proportion of labile OM, with higher concentrations of DOC and algal-derived OM. Lake-fed tributaries in this zone contain even higher proportions of labile OM. At one of these sites, the sediment core record shows that Hg has been increasingly associated with labile OM over time, due to increasing primary productivity accelerated by climate change, and is resulting in an increase in scavenged Hg. The temporal trend in algal-bound Hg in the sediment record matches very well with the temporal trend of Hg in burbot sampled from the area, providing one of the first and strongest lines of evidence for the climatic impact on Hg bioaccumulation in Arctic ecosystems. May 2010 Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Arctic Arctic Beluga Beluga* Burbot Climate change Mackenzie river MSpace at the University of Manitoba Arctic Canada Mackenzie River
institution Open Polar
collection MSpace at the University of Manitoba
op_collection_id ftunivmanitoba
language English
topic mercury
Mackenzie River
Arctic
organic matter
burbot
climate change
spellingShingle mercury
Mackenzie River
Arctic
organic matter
burbot
climate change
Carrie, Jesse D.
Organic carbon, mercury and climate change: towards a better understanding of biotic contamination in the Canadian Arctic
topic_facet mercury
Mackenzie River
Arctic
organic matter
burbot
climate change
description Mercury (Hg) is a known neurotoxin that is often found in concentrations exceeding safe consumption guidelines in aquatic biota. This is evident in northern Canada, where northerners consume significant amounts of animals such as beluga, seals and burbot. In the Mackenzie River Basin, recent increases in Hg concentration in many of these animals over the past 25 years have been observed. The warming climate, and with it, the changing carbon cycle, are hypothesised in this thesis to play a role in the increases. Within the context of the two major zones (mountainous and peatland), with distinct geomorphology, hydrology and geology, traditional fossil fuel exploration methods (Rock-Eval pyrolysis, organic petrography) have been employed in a novel manner on recent sediments to qualify and quantify the OM and several geochemical analyses have been used to determine the geochemical sources of Hg. The mountainous zone is composed mostly of refractory OM, from forest fire char and heavily reworked OM. It also contains, and fluxes, most of the Hg, which derives from oxidative weathering and erosion of widespread sulfide minerals. However, Hg from this zone is in chemical forms of limited bioavailability. The peatland zone has a greater proportion of labile OM, with higher concentrations of DOC and algal-derived OM. Lake-fed tributaries in this zone contain even higher proportions of labile OM. At one of these sites, the sediment core record shows that Hg has been increasingly associated with labile OM over time, due to increasing primary productivity accelerated by climate change, and is resulting in an increase in scavenged Hg. The temporal trend in algal-bound Hg in the sediment record matches very well with the temporal trend of Hg in burbot sampled from the area, providing one of the first and strongest lines of evidence for the climatic impact on Hg bioaccumulation in Arctic ecosystems. May 2010
author2 Wang, Feiyue (Environment & Geography) Stern, Gary (Environment & Geography)
Papakyriakou, Tim (Environment & Geography) Macdonald, Robie (Environment & Geography) Halden, Norman (Geological Science) Gobeil, Charles (Institut National de Recherche Scientifique)
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Carrie, Jesse D.
author_facet Carrie, Jesse D.
author_sort Carrie, Jesse D.
title Organic carbon, mercury and climate change: towards a better understanding of biotic contamination in the Canadian Arctic
title_short Organic carbon, mercury and climate change: towards a better understanding of biotic contamination in the Canadian Arctic
title_full Organic carbon, mercury and climate change: towards a better understanding of biotic contamination in the Canadian Arctic
title_fullStr Organic carbon, mercury and climate change: towards a better understanding of biotic contamination in the Canadian Arctic
title_full_unstemmed Organic carbon, mercury and climate change: towards a better understanding of biotic contamination in the Canadian Arctic
title_sort organic carbon, mercury and climate change: towards a better understanding of biotic contamination in the canadian arctic
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3923
geographic Arctic
Canada
Mackenzie River
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
Mackenzie River
genre Arctic
Arctic
Beluga
Beluga*
Burbot
Climate change
Mackenzie river
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
Beluga
Beluga*
Burbot
Climate change
Mackenzie river
op_relation Carrie, J., Sanei, H., Goodarzi, F., Stern, G., Wang, F. (2009) Characterization of organic matter in surface sediments of the Mackenzie River Basin, Canada, International Journal of Coal Geology 77:416-423.
Carrie, J., Stern, G., Sanei, H., Macdonald, R., Outridge, P., Wang, F. (2010) Increasing contaminant burdens in an Arctic fish, burbot (lota lota), in a warming climate, Environmental Science & Technology 44: 316-322.
http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3923
op_rights open access
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