4.5 Article

Dragonfly larvae as biosentinels of Hg bioaccumulation in Northeastern and Adirondack lakes: relationships to abiotic factors

Journal

ECOTOXICOLOGY
Volume 29, Issue 10, Pages 1659-1672

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10646-019-02149-4

Keywords

Mercury; Dragonfly; Northeastern lakes; EPA LTM Network; Biosentinels

Funding

  1. Northeastern States Research Cooperative by the USDA Forest Service
  2. EPA ORD from the US Geological Survey [IAG 06HQGR0143]
  3. EPA CAMD from the US Geological Survey [IAG 06HQGR0143]
  4. National Institutes of Health Grant from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences [P42 ESO7373]
  5. New York State Energy Research and Development Authority
  6. New York State Department of Environmental Conservation Division of Air Resources
  7. US EPA Clean Air Markets Division

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Mercury (Hg) is a toxic pollutant, widespread in northeastern US ecosystems. Resource managers' efforts to develop fish consumption advisories for humans and to focus conservation efforts for fish-eating wildlife are hampered by spatial variability. Dragonfly larvae can serve as biosentinels for Hg given that they are widespread in freshwaters, long-lived, exhibit site fidelity, and bioaccumulate relatively high mercury concentrations, mostly as methylmercury (88% +/- 11% MeHg in this study). We sampled lake water and dragonfly larvae in 74 northeastern US lakes that are part of the US EPA Long-Term Monitoring Network, including 45 lakes in New York, 43 of which are in the Adirondacks. Aqueous dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and total Hg (THg) were strongly related to MeHg in lake water. Dragonfly larvae total mercury ranged from 0.016-0.918 mu g/g, dw across the study area; Adirondack lakes had the minimum and maximum concentrations. Aqueous MeHg and dragonfly THg were similar between the Adirondack and Northeast regions, but a majority of lakes within the highest quartile of dragonfly THg were in the Adirondacks. Using landscape, lake chemistry, and lake morphometry data, we evaluated relationships with MeHg in lake water and THg in dragonfly larvae. Lakewater DOC and lake volume were strong predictors for MeHg in water. Dragonfly THg Bioaccumulation Factors (BAFs, calculated as [dragonfly THg]:[aqueous MeHg]) increased as lake volume increased, suggesting that lake size influences Hg bioaccumulation or biomagnification. BAFs declined with increasing DOC, supporting a potential limiting effect for MeHg bioavailability with higher DOC.

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