ABSTRACT:
Algal blooms reduce the uptake of toxic methylmercury in
freshwater food webs
Mercury accumulation in fish is a global public health concern,
because fish are the primary source of toxic methylmercury
to humans. Fish from all lakes do not pose the same level
of risk to consumers. One of the most intriguing patterns
is that potentially dangerous mercury concentrations can be
found in fish from clear, oligotrophic lakes whereas fish
from greener, eutrophic lakes often carry less mercury. In
this study, we experimentally tested the hypothesis that increasing
algal biomass reduces mercury accumulation at higher trophic
levels through the dilution of mercury in consumed algal cells.
Under bloom dilution, as algal biomass increases, the concentration
of mercury per cell decreases, resulting in a lower dietary
input to grazers and reduced bioaccumulation in algal-rich
eutrophic systems. To test this hypothesis, we added enriched
stable isotopes of Hg to experimental mesocosms and measured
the uptake of toxic methylmercury (CH3 200Hg+) and inorganic
201Hg2+ by biota at several algal concentrations. We reduced
absolute spike detection limits by 50-100 times compared with
previous techniques, which allowed us to conduct experiments
at the extremely low aqueous Hg concentrations that are typical
of natural systems. We found that increasing algae reduced
CH3Hg+ concentrations in zooplankton 2-3-fold. Bloom dilution
may provide a mechanistic explanation for lower CH3Hg+ accumulation
by zooplankton and fish in algal-rich relative to algal-poor
systems.
Pickhardt PC, Folt CL, Chen CY, Klaue B, Blum JD, Algal
blooms reduce the uptake of toxic methylmercury in freshwater
food webs, Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 99 (7):
4419-23, 2002.