Mercury increase in Lake Champlain fish: links to fishery dynamics and extreme climatic events

被引:0
|
作者
Mark W. Swinton
Sandra A. Nierzwicki-Bauer
机构
[1] Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute,Darrin Fresh Water Institute
[2] Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute,Department of Biological Sciences
来源
Ecotoxicology | 2020年 / 29卷
关键词
Fish; Mercury; Lake Champlain; Extreme climatic events; Fishery dynamics;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Mercury concentrations in Lake Champlain fish increased (2011–2017) for the first time in more than two decades. The increase, however, was not consistent among species or throughout the lake. Mercury concentrations in smallmouth bass and yellow perch from the three Main Lake segments increased significantly while concentrations in the eastern portions of the lake (Northeast Arm and Malletts Bay) remained unchanged or decreased; mercury concentrations in white perch remained unchanged. Factors examined to explain the increase included: atmospheric deposition, lake temperature, chlorophyll-a, fishery dynamics, lake flooding and loading of total suspended solids (TSS). This paper examines how each factor has changed between study periods and the spatial variability associated with the change. We hypothesize fishery dynamics, flooding and TSS loading may be partially responsible for the increase in fish mercury. Both growth efficiency and biomass of fish suggest mercury concentrations would increase in the Main Lake segments and decrease in the eastern portion of the lake. Additionally, two extreme climate events in 2011 resulted in extensive flooding and a four-fold increase in annual TSS loading, both potentially increasing biotic mercury with the impact varying spatially throughout the lake. Changes to the fishery and disturbance caused by extreme climatic events have increased biotic mercury and the processes responsible need further study to identify possible future scenarios in order to better protect human and wildlife health.
引用
收藏
页码:1750 / 1761
页数:11
相关论文
共 36 条
  • [21] Short-Term Dynamics of Bdellovibrio and Like Organisms in Lake Geneva in Response to a Simulated Climatic Extreme Event
    Ezzedine, J. A.
    Janicot, A.
    Rasconi, S.
    Domaizon, I.
    Jacquet, S.
    MICROBIAL ECOLOGY, 2022, 84 (03) : 717 - 729
  • [22] Short-Term Dynamics of Bdellovibrio and Like Organisms in Lake Geneva in Response to a Simulated Climatic Extreme Event
    J. A. Ezzedine
    A. Janicot
    S. Rasconi
    I. Domaizon
    S. Jacquet
    Microbial Ecology, 2022, 84 : 717 - 729
  • [23] Dynamics of soil microarthropod populations affected by a combination of extreme climatic events in tropical home gardens of Kerala, India
    Lakshmi, Gopakumar
    Beggi, Francesca
    Menta, Cristina
    Kumar, Nallur Krishna
    Jayesh, Puthumana
    PEDOBIOLOGIA, 2021, 85-86
  • [24] Climate disruption and parasite-host dynamics: patterns and processes associated with warming and the frequency of extreme climatic events
    Hudson, P. J.
    Cattadori, M.
    Boag, B.
    Dobson, A. P.
    JOURNAL OF HELMINTHOLOGY, 2006, 80 (02) : 175 - 182
  • [25] Ensemble Modeling of the Impact of Climate Warming and Increased Frequency of Extreme Climatic Events on the Thermal Characteristics of a Sub-Tropical Lake
    Gal, Gideon
    Yael, Gilboa
    Noam, Schachar
    Moshe, Estroti
    Schlabing, Dirk
    WATER, 2020, 12 (07)
  • [26] Effect of extreme climatic events on fish seed production in Lower Brahmaputra Valley, Assam, India: Constraint analysis and adaptive strategies
    Bhattacharjya, Birendra Kumar
    Yadav, Anil Kumar
    Debnath, Dipesh
    Saud, Bhaskar Jyoti
    Verma, Vinod Kumar
    Yengkokpam, Sona
    Sarkar, Uttam Kumar
    Das, Basanta Kumar
    AQUATIC ECOSYSTEM HEALTH & MANAGEMENT, 2021, 24 (03) : 39 - 46
  • [27] Long-term effects of extreme weather events and eutrophication on the fish community of shallow lake Peipsi (Estonia/Russia)
    Kangur, Kuelli
    Kangur, Peeter
    Ginter, Kai
    Orru, Kati
    Haldna, Marina
    Moels, Tonu
    Kangur, Andu
    JOURNAL OF LIMNOLOGY, 2013, 72 (02) : 376 - 387
  • [28] Weather and butterfly responses: a framework for understanding population dynamics in terms of species' life-cycles and extreme climatic events
    Ubach, Andreu
    Paramo, Ferran
    Prohom, Marc
    Stefanescu, Constanti
    OECOLOGIA, 2022, 199 (02) : 427 - 439
  • [29] Weather and butterfly responses: a framework for understanding population dynamics in terms of species’ life-cycles and extreme climatic events
    Andreu Ubach
    Ferran Páramo
    Marc Prohom
    Constantí Stefanescu
    Oecologia, 2022, 199 : 427 - 439
  • [30] Multi-model approach to predict phytoplankton biomass and composition dynamics in a eutrophic shallow lake governed by extreme meteorological events
    Crisci, Carolina
    Terra, Rafael
    Pablo Pacheco, Juan
    Ghattas, Badih
    Bidegain, Mario
    Goyenola, Guillermo
    Jose Lagomarsino, Juan
    Mendez, Gustavo
    Mazzeo, Nestor
    ECOLOGICAL MODELLING, 2017, 360 : 80 - 93