
Mercury methylation upon coastal sediment resuspension: a worst-case approach under dark conditions
2022; Springer Science+Business Media; Volume: 194; Issue: 11 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1007/s10661-022-10485-y
ISSN1573-2959
AutoresChristiane do Nascimento Monte, Ana Paula de Castro Rodrigues, Petrus Galvão, Gabriela Cugler de Pontes, Olaf Malm, Julio César Wasserman, Wilson Machado,
Tópico(s)Heavy metals in environment
ResumoMercury behavior upon resuspension of sediments from two impacted areas of Guanabara Bay was evaluated to assess worst-case methylmercury (MeHg) responses, under dark experimental conditions to prevent demethylation by photolysis. Study areas include the Rio de Janeiro Harbor (RJH) and the chlor-alkali plant–affected Meriti River (MR) estuary. Total mercury (THg) and MeHg concentrations were determined along 24-h experiments of sediment resuspension in the bay water in dark conditions. Fine-grained Meriti River (MR) estuary sediments had 8 times higher MeHg initial concentrations than sandy Rio de Janeiro Harbor (RJH) sediments (3.4 ± 0.29 vs. 0.41 ± 0.1 ng g−1, respectively). Though THg contents were uncorrelated with resuspension time, statistically significant correlations of MeHg (rs = 0.78) and %MeHg in relation to THg (rs = 0.86) with resuspension time were observed for RJH sediments, indicating net methylation only for this study site. These positive correlation trends correspond to a 2.8 times MeHg concentration increase (ΔMeHg = 0.75 ng g−1) and 4.4 times increase in %MeHg (Δ%MeHg = 1.0%), after 24 h of resuspension. This suggests that assessments of factors affecting the MeHg spatial–temporal variability and associated toxicity risks can be limited in some sites if concentration changes due to sediment resuspension-redeposition processes are not considered. Therefore, the inclusion of MeHg evaluation before and after sediment resuspension events is recommendable for the improvement of dredging licensing and monitoring activities.
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