Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9456294 | Environmental Pollution | 2005 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Terrestrial plants and soil contain substantial amounts of organic carbon (C) and mercury. Flooding terrestrial areas stimulates microbial methyl mercury (MeHg) production and fish obtain elevated MeHg concentrations. Our purpose was to determine the loss of C, total mercury (THg), and MeHg from boreal plants and soil after burning to assess the potential of burning before flooding to lower MeHg. Fresh plants contained 4 to 52 ng gâ1 dry weight (dw) of THg and 0.1 to 1.3 ng gâ1 dw of MeHg. Upland soils contained 162±132 ng gâ1 dw of THg and 0.6±0.6 ng gâ1 dw of MeHg. Complete burning caused plants to lose 96, 98, 97, and 94% of the mass, C, THg, and MeHg, respectively. Upland soil lost 27, 95, 79, and 82% of the mass, C, THg, and MeHg, respectively. Our results demonstrated that a substantial loss of C, THg, and MeHg was caused by burning.
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Environmental Science
Environmental Chemistry
Authors
M. Mailman, R.A. Bodaly,