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Changes in mercury exposure of marine birds breeding in the Gulf of Maine, 2008-2013

Authors :
David C. Evers
Evan M. Adams
Kevin Regan
Jennifer L. Goyette
M. Wing Goodale
Iain J. Stenhouse
Source :
Marine pollution bulletin. 128
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Mercury is a potent contaminant that can disrupt an organism's behavior and physiology, ultimately affecting reproductive success. Over the last 100 years, environmental deposition of anthropogenic sourced mercury has increased globally, particularly in the U.S. Northeast region. Marine birds are considered effective bioindicators of ecosystem health, including persistent marine contaminants. Goodale et al. (2008) found that mercury exposure exceeded adverse effects levels in some marine bird species breeding across the Gulf of Maine. We re-examined mercury contamination in four species identified as effective bioindicators. Compared with the previous sampling effort, inshore-feeding species showed significant increases in mercury exposure, while one pelagic-feeding species remained stable. This suggests that a major shift may have occurred in methylmercury availability in inshore waters of the Gulf of Maine. Understanding environmental mercury trends in the Gulf of Maine, and its significance to marine birds and other taxa will require a dedicated, standardized, long-term monitoring scheme.

Details

ISSN :
18793363
Volume :
128
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Marine pollution bulletin
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6a930c0180a38f30815b0ef1acc0b777