Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4425224 Environmental Pollution 2011 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Mercury (Hg) is a persistent environmental contaminant found in many freshwater and marine ecosystems. Historical Hg contamination in rivers can impact the surrounding terrestrial ecosystem, but there is little known about how far downstream this contamination persists. In 2009, we sampled terrestrial forest songbirds at five floodplain sites up to 137 km downstream of an historical source of Hg along the South and South Fork Shenandoah Rivers (Virginia, USA). We found that blood total Hg concentrations remained elevated over the entire sampling area and there was little evidence of decline with distance. While it is well known that Hg is a pervasive and long-lasting aquatic contaminant, it has only been recently recognized that it also biomagnifies effectively in floodplain forest food webs. This study extends the area of concern for terrestrial habitats near contaminated rivers for more than 100 km downstream from a waterborne Hg point source.

► We report blood mercury levels for terrestrial songbirds downstream of contamination. ► Blood mercury levels remain elevated above reference for at least 137 km downstream. ► Trends vary based on foraging guild and migration strategy. ► Mercury affects terrestrial biota farther downstream than previously documented.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Environmental Science Environmental Chemistry
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