Seasonal and Inter-Annual Variations in Methyl Mercury Concentrations in Zooplankton from Boreal Lakes Impacted by Deforestation or Natural Forest Fires |
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Authors: | Edenise Garcia Richard Carignan David R. S. Lean |
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Affiliation: | (1) Département des sciences biologiques, Université de Montréal, C.P. 6128, Succursale Centre-Ville, Pavillon Marie-Victorin, Montréal, Québec, H3C 3J7, Canada;(2) Biology Department, University of Ottawa, 30 Marie Curie, P.O. Box 450, Station A, Ottawa, Ontario, K1N 6N5, Canada;(3) Jacques Whitford Limited, 4370 Dominion Street 5th floor, Burnaby, BC, Canada, V5G 4L7 |
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Abstract: | We compared the effects of natural and anthropogenic watershed disturbances on methyl mercury (MeHg) concentration in bulk zooplankton from boreal Shield lakes. MeHg in zooplankton was monitored for three years in nine lakes impacted by deforestation, in nine lakes impacted by wildfire, and in twenty lakes with undisturbed catchments. Lakes were sampled during spring, mid- and late summer. MeHg in zooplankton showed a seasonal trend: concentrations were the lowest in spring, then peaked in mid-summer and decreased in late summer. Over the three study years, MeHg concentrations observed in mid-summer in zooplankton from forest harvested lakes were significantly higher than in reference and fire-impacted lakes, whereas differences between these two groups of lakes were not significant. The pattern of distribution of MeHg in zooplankton during the different seasons paralleled that of dissolved organic carbon (DOC), which is known as a vector of Hg from watershed soils to lake water. Besides DOC, MeHg in zooplankton also showed a positive significant correlation with epilimnetic temperature and sulfate concentrations. An inter-annual decreasing trend in MeHg was observed in zooplankton from reference and fire-impacted lakes. In forest harvested lakes, however, MeHg concentrations remained higher and nearly constant over three years following the impact. Overall these results indicate that the MeHg pulse observed in zooplankton following deforestation by harvesting is relatively long-lived, and may have repercussions to the accumulation of MeHg along the food chain. Therefore, potential effects of deforestation on the Hg contamination of fish should be taken into account in forest management practices. |
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Keywords: | Deforestation Forest fire Methyl mercury Temporal trends Zooplankton |
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