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Spatial patterns and distributional controls of total and methylated mercury off the Lena River in the Laptev Sea sediments V. Liem-Nguyen, B. Wild, Ö. Gustafsson [et al.]

Contributor(s): Liem-Nguyen, Van | Wild, Birgit | Gustafsson, Örjan | Semiletov, Igor P | Dudarev, Oleg V | Jonsson, SofiMaterial type: ArticleArticleContent type: Текст Media type: электронный Subject(s): Лена, река | Лаптевых море | метилированная ртутьGenre/Form: статьи в журналах Online resources: Click here to access online In: Marine chemistry Vol. 238. P. 104052 (1-7)Abstract: A warmer climate is predicted to accelerate the export of mercury (Hg) from Siberian rivers to the Arctic Ocean, yet there is a dearth of process-oriented studies on the speciation and fate of Hg in the shelf sea system. Here, we present data on total Hg (HgT) and methylmercury (MeHg) in Laptev Sea surface sediments along a cross-shelf transect starting at the mouth of the Lena River. Concentrations of HgT along the 330 km cross-shelf transect ranged within a fairly narrow span from 480 to 150 pmol g−1 d.w., while concentrations of MeHg decreased one hundredfold from 13 pmol g−1 d.w. near the Lena river to 0.095 pmol g−1 d.w. in the more distall stations. The highest concentrations of HgT and MeHg were observed close to the river delta and were associated with a high supply of organic carbon (OC). Enrichment of the OC normalized HgT concentration (HgTOC) and depletion of the OC normalized MeHg concentration (MeHgOC) across the shelf suggests bulk OC content to not be the only driver of the HgT and MeHg spatial distributions. Based on correlations observed between HgTOC and MeHgOC and proxies for sediment physics and organic matter pools we suggest the spatial distribution of Hg and MeHg to also be influenced by hydrodynamic sorting of riverine-derived material. For MeHg, depletion of the MeHgOC across the shelf is likely driven by the trapping of terrestrial MeHg in sediments close to the river delta before it is degraded in the water column.
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Библиогр.: с. 6

A warmer climate is predicted to accelerate the export of mercury (Hg) from Siberian rivers to the Arctic Ocean, yet there is a dearth of process-oriented studies on the speciation and fate of Hg in the shelf sea system. Here, we present data on total Hg (HgT) and methylmercury (MeHg) in Laptev Sea surface sediments along a cross-shelf transect starting at the mouth of the Lena River. Concentrations of HgT along the 330 km cross-shelf transect ranged within a fairly narrow span from 480 to 150 pmol g−1 d.w., while concentrations of MeHg decreased one hundredfold from 13 pmol g−1 d.w. near the Lena river to 0.095 pmol g−1 d.w. in the more distall stations. The highest concentrations of HgT and MeHg were observed close to the river delta and were associated with a high supply of organic carbon (OC). Enrichment of the OC normalized HgT concentration (HgTOC) and depletion of the OC normalized MeHg concentration (MeHgOC) across the shelf suggests bulk OC content to not be the only driver of the HgT and MeHg spatial distributions. Based on correlations observed between HgTOC and MeHgOC and proxies for sediment physics and organic matter pools we suggest the spatial distribution of Hg and MeHg to also be influenced by hydrodynamic sorting of riverine-derived material. For MeHg, depletion of the MeHgOC across the shelf is likely driven by the trapping of terrestrial MeHg in sediments close to the river delta before it is degraded in the water column.

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