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Mercury source changes and food web shifts alter contamination signatures of predatory fish from Lake Michigan.


ABSTRACT: To understand the impact reduced mercury (Hg) loading and invasive species have had on methylmercury bioaccumulation in predator fish of Lake Michigan, we reconstructed bioaccumulation trends from a fish archive (1978 to 2012). By measuring fish Hg stable isotope ratios, we related temporal changes in Hg concentrations to varying Hg sources. Additionally, dietary tracers were necessary to identify food web influences. Through combined Hg, C, and N stable isotopic analyses, we were able to differentiate between a shift in Hg sources to fish and periods when energetic transitions (from dreissenid mussels) led to the assimilation of contrasting Hg pools (2000 to present). In the late 1980s, lake trout ?202Hg increased (0.4‰) from regulatory reductions in regional Hg emissions. After 2000, C and N isotopes ratios revealed altered food web pathways, resulting in a benthic energetic shift and changes to Hg bioaccumulation. Continued increases in ?202Hg indicate fish are responding to several United States mercury emission mitigation strategies that were initiated circa 1990 and continued through the 2011 promulgation of the Mercury and Air Toxics Standards rule. Unlike archives of sediments, this fish archive tracks Hg sources susceptible to bioaccumulation in Great Lakes fisheries. Analysis reveals that trends in fish Hg concentrations can be substantially affected by shifts in trophic structure and dietary preferences initiated by invasive species in the Great Lakes. This does not diminish the benefits of declining emissions over this period, as fish Hg concentrations would have been higher without these actions.

SUBMITTER: Lepak RF 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6876223 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Mercury source changes and food web shifts alter contamination signatures of predatory fish from Lake Michigan.

Lepak Ryan F RF   Hoffman Joel C JC   Janssen Sarah E SE   Krabbenhoft David P DP   Ogorek Jacob M JM   DeWild John F JF   Tate Michael T MT   Babiarz Christopher L CL   Yin Runsheng R   Murphy Elizabeth W EW   Engstrom Daniel R DR   Hurley James P JP  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20191104 47


To understand the impact reduced mercury (Hg) loading and invasive species have had on methylmercury bioaccumulation in predator fish of Lake Michigan, we reconstructed bioaccumulation trends from a fish archive (1978 to 2012). By measuring fish Hg stable isotope ratios, we related temporal changes in Hg concentrations to varying Hg sources. Additionally, dietary tracers were necessary to identify food web influences. Through combined Hg, C, and N stable isotopic analyses, we were able to differ  ...[more]

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