Artigo Revisado por pares

Methylmercury in Mosquitoes Related to Atmospheric Mercury Deposition and Contamination

2005; American Chemical Society; Volume: 39; Issue: 9 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1021/es0485107

ISSN

1520-5851

Autores

Chad R. Hammerschmidt, William F. Fitzgerald,

Tópico(s)

Heavy metals in environment

Resumo

A connection between loadings of inorganic Hg, especially from the atmosphere, and accumulation of methylmercury (MeHg) in aquatic biota has not been firmly established. Mosquitoes (Diptera: Culicidae) may be a useful indictor of Hg contamination or MeHg accumulation in aquatic ecosystems because they have aquatic life stages, and their ubiquitous distribution permits sampling across wide ranges of climate, biological productivity, and atmospheric Hg deposition. We examined MeHg in adult mosquitoes from subtropical (Florida), maritime (California), continental (Michigan), and arctic (Alaska) regions of North America that span a range in wet atmospheric Hg deposition (1.5−15 μg m-2 y-1). More than 90% of the Hg in mosquitoes was MeHg, and concentrations varied among locations. Levels of MeHg differed among mosquito species at six sites in northwest Florida (Ochlerotatus atlanticus < Culex nigripalpus < Anopheles crucians); this may be related to differences in biogeochemical characteristics of the aquatic habitat that affect dietary accumulation of MeHg during the larval stage. Mosquito MeHg was related positively to wet atmospheric Hg deposition among locations where atmospheric deposition is the principal source of Hg, and it was greatly enhanced in Hg-polluted environs near the Sulphur Bank Mine in Lake County, California. These results suggest that MeHg in mosquitoes may be a useful and sensitive indicator of Hg loadings to aquatic systems, including that derived from atmospheric deposition.

Referência(s)