Title of article :
Age and trophic position dominate bioaccumulation of mercury and
organochlorines in the food web of Lake Washington
Author/Authors :
Jenifer K. McIntyre ?، نويسنده , , David A. Beauchamp، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
Understanding the mechanisms of bioaccumulation in food webs is critical to predicting which food webs are at risk for higher
rates of bioaccumulation that endanger the health of upper-trophic predators, including humans. Mercury and organochlorines were
measured concurrently with stable isotopes of nitrogen and carbon in key fishes and invertebrates of Lake Washington to explore
important pathways of bioaccumulation in this food web. Across the food web, age and trophic position together were highly
significant predictors of bioaccumulation. Trophic position was more important than age for predicting accumulation of mercury,
ΣDDT, and Σ-chlordane, whereas age was more important than trophic position for predicting ΣPCB. Excluding age from the
analysis inflated the apparent importance of trophic position to bioaccumulation for all contaminants. Benthic and pelagic habitats
had similar potential to bioaccumulate contaminants, although higher Σ-chlordane concentrations in organisms were weakly
associated with more benthic carbon signals. In individual fish species, contaminant concentrations increased with age, size, and
trophic position (δ15N), whereas relationships with carbon source (δ13C) were not consistent. Lipid concentrations were correlated
with contaminant concentrations in some but not all fishes, suggesting that lipids were not involved mechanistically in bioaccumulation.
Contaminant concentrations in biota did not vary among littoral sites. Collectively, these results suggest that age may
be an important determinant of bioaccumulation in many food webs and could help explain a significant amount of the variability
in apparent biomagnification rates among food webs. As such, effort should be made when possible to collect information on
organism age in addition to stable isotopes when assessing food webs for rates of biomagnification.
Keywords :
biomagnification , bioaccumulation , Organochlorines , Food web , mercury , Lake Washington
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment