• Title of article

    Bioaccumulation patterns of methyl mercury and essential fatty acids in lacustrine planktonic food webs and fishB

  • Author/Authors

    Martin Kainz، نويسنده , , *، نويسنده , , Kevin Telmer، نويسنده , , Asit Mazumder، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
  • Pages
    12
  • From page
    271
  • To page
    282
  • Abstract
    Organisms of the planktonic food web convey essential nutrients as well as contaminants to animals at higher trophic levels. We measured concentrations of methyl mercury (MeHg) and essential fatty acids (EFAs, key nutrients for aquatic food webs) in four size categories of planktonic organisms – seston (10–64 Am), micro-(100–200 Am), meso-(200–500 Am), and macrozooplankton (N500 Am) – as well as total mercury (THg) and EFAs in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) in coastal lakes. We demonstrate that, in all lakes during this summer sampling, MeHg concentrations of planktonic organisms increase significantly with plankton size, independent of their taxonomic composition, and that their MeHg accumulation patterns predict significantly THg concentrations in rainbow trout (R2=0.71, p b0.05). However, concentrations of total EFAs do not follow this pattern. Total EFAs increased from seston to mesozooplankton but decreased in the largest zooplankton size fraction. Moreover, concentrations of individual EFA compounds in rainbow trout are consistently lower, with the exception of docosahexaenoic acid, than those in macrozooplankton. The continuous increase of MeHg concentrations in aquatic organisms, therefore, differs from patterns of EFA accumulation in zooplankton and fish. We interpret these contrasting accumulation patterns of MeHg and EFA compounds as the inability of aquatic organisms to regulate the assimilation of dietary MeHg, whereas the rate of EFA retention may be controlled to optimize their physiological performance. Therefore, we conclude that bioaccumulation patterns of Hg in these aquatic food webs are not controlled by lipid solubility and/or the retention of EFA compounds
  • Keywords
    Essential fatty acids , Rainbow trout , planktonic food web , Methyl mercury
  • Journal title
    Science of the Total Environment
  • Serial Year
    2006
  • Journal title
    Science of the Total Environment
  • Record number

    985657