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How Non-native Species in Lake Erie Influence Trophic Transfer of Mercury and Lead to Top Predators Abstract: Lake Erie’s food web has been dramatically
modified by exotic species. Both exotic dreissenid mussels and the
round goby Neogobius melanastomus have shifted the food web from a
pelagicbased to a benthic-based one, potentially creating a new pathway
for contaminant transfer to top predators. Before the invasion of round
gobies, few predators of dreissenids occurred in Lake Erie, allowing
contaminants to be confined to these benthic organisms. The invasion
of the round goby has produced a new pathway through which these contaminants
can enter the food web. To characterize heavy-metal transfer through
this new food web and to assess risk to humans, water, surficial sediment,
dreissenid, round goby, and smallmouth bass Micropterus dolomieui samples
were collected at three sites during summers, 2002 and 2003, and analyzed
for total lead (Pb), total mercury (Hg), and methyl mercury (MeHg).
In addition, we compared smallmouth bass Pb and Hg concentrations to
those measured in 1993/1994, before round gobies were prevalent. Pb
biodiminished and MeHg biomagnified through the food web to smallmouth
bass; patterns were similar among our three sites. Total Pb concentrations
in smallmouth bass were higher before the incorporation of round gobies
into their diet. We attributed this decline to changes in food web
structure, changes in contaminant burdens in prey, or declines in sediment
Pb concentrations in Lake Erie. By comparison, Hg concentrations in
smallmouth bass changed little, before and after the round goby invasion,
possibly due to a shift in diet that increased growth. Despite a decline
in sediment Hg concentrations in Lake Erie, smallmouth bass continued
to accumulate Hg at historical rates possibly because of their high
consumption rates of benthivorous round gobies. As smallmouth bass
continue to consume round gobies during their lives, their Hg concentrations
may well continue to increase, potentially increasing the risk of Hg
contamination to humans.
Southward-Hogan, L.R., Marschall, E.A., Folt, C.L., Stein, R.A. Journal of Great Lakes Research. 2007 33(1):46-61. |
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