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Mercury Contamination of Fish and Its Implications for Other Wildlife of the Tapajós Basin, Brazilian Amazon
Authors:Yumiko Uryu  Olaf Malm    Iain Thornton  ‡††  Ian Payne  §  David Cleary
Institution:Department of Biology, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom;Laboratório de Radioisótopos Eduardo Penna Franca, Instituto de Biofísica Carlos Chagas Filho, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, CCS, Ilha do Fundão 21949-900, RJ, Brasil;Environmental Geochemistry Research Group, Centre for Environmental Technology, Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine, Royal School of Mines, Prince Consort Road, London SW7 2BP, United Kingdom;Marine Resources Assessment Group, Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine, 8 Prince's Gardens, London SW7 1NA, United Kingdom;Projeto Mercurio, Fundação Esperança, Caixa Postal 222, Santarém, 68040–100 Pará, Brazil
Abstract:Abstract: Since 1979 the gold rush in the Brazilian Amazon has caused serious environmental damage to one of the most complex ecosystems on Earth. Mainly due to the toxicity of mercury to humans, this problem has received wide public attention and prompted many studies. Although these studies have involved sampling of fish, the negative effect of mercury contamination to fish themselves and other wildlife has been largely ignored. To assess the present level of mercury contamination of fish, and its implication for fish and other animals, we collected and examined data on mercury concentration in fish of the Brazilian Amazon, especially for the Tapajós basin, between 1991 and 1996. We conclude that omnivores and piscivores that live nearer to gold mining areas in the Tapajós basin are already at high risk of mercury toxification, especially reproductive failure. Mercury concentrations in these fish are also high enough to have detrimental effects on animals at higher trophic levels. The same conclusion applies to other mercury-contaminated areas in the Brazilian Amazon. Because most Amazonian rivers or their tributaries have favorable conditions for mercury contamination, we can expect the problem to persist in the Amazon for a long time, and the consequences are likely to become more significant in the future. These conclusions have important implications for all tropical rainforests where gold mining operations have caused extensive mercury pollution.
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