Fuente: Harvard Science &  Engineering Channel
  Expuesto el: lunes, 21 de mayo de 2012 0:33
  Autor: cperry
  Asunto: Toxic mercury, accumulating in the Arctic, springs from a hidden  source
| Harvard study finds    circumpolar rivers most responsible for high levels of mercury in the Arctic 
 The Lena    River delta. The Lena is one of several major rivers that flows northward    into the Arctic Ocean. (False-color satellite image courtesy of NASA.) Cambridge, Mass.    - May 21, 2012 -    Environmental scientists at Harvard have discovered that the Arctic    accumulation of mercury, a toxic element, is caused by both atmospheric    forces and the flow of circumpolar rivers that carry the element north into    the Arctic Ocean. While the atmospheric    source was previously recognized, it now appears that twice as much mercury    actually comes from the rivers. The revelation implies    that concentrations of the toxin may further increase as climate change continues    to modify the region's hydrological cycle and release mercury from warming    Arctic soils. "The Arctic is a    unique environment because it's so remote from most anthropogenic    (human-influenced) sources of mercury, yet we know that the concentrations of    mercury in Arctic marine mammals are among the highest in the world,"    says lead author Jenny A. Fisher, a postdoctoral fellow in Harvard's Atmospheric Chemistry Modeling Group    and the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences (EPS). "This is    dangerous to both marine life and humans. The question from a scientific    standpoint is, where does that mercury come from?" The results of the study,    which was led jointly by Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences    (SEAS) and Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH), appeared in the journal Nature Geoscience on    May 20. Mercury is a naturally    occurring element that has been enriched in the environment by human    activities such as coal combustion and mining. When converted to    methylmercury by microbial processes in the ocean, it can accumulate in fish    and wildlife at concentrations up to a million times higher than the levels    found in the environment. "In humans, mercury    is a potent neurotoxin," explains co-principal investigator Elsie M.    Sunderland, Mark and Catherine Winkler Assistant Professor of Aquatic Science    at HSPH. "It can cause long-term developmental delays in exposed    children and impair cardiovascular health in adults." Mercury is considered a    persistent bioaccumulative toxin because it remains in the environment    without breaking down; as it travels up the food chain, from plankton to    fish, to marine mammals and humans, it becomes more concentrated and more    dangerous. "Indigenous people    in the Arctic are particularly susceptible to the effects of methylmercury    exposure because they consume large amounts of fish and marine mammals as    part of their traditional diet," Sunderland says. "Understanding    the sources of mercury to the Arctic Ocean and how these levels are expected    to change in the future is therefore key to protecting the health of northern    populations." Sunderland supervised the    study with Daniel Jacob, Vasco McCoy Family Professor of Atmospheric    Chemistry and Environmental Engineering at SEAS, where Sunderland is also an    affiliate. Mercury enters the    Earth's atmosphere through emissions from coal combustion, waste    incineration, and mining. Once airborne, it can drift in the atmosphere for    up to a year, until chemical processes make it soluble and it falls back to    the ground in rain or snow. This deposition is spread worldwide, and much of    the mercury deposited to Arctic snow and ice is re-emitted to the atmosphere,    which limits the impact on the Arctic Ocean. "That's why these    river sources are so important," says Fisher. "The mercury is going    straight into the ocean." The most important rivers    flowing to the Arctic Ocean are in Siberia: the Lena, the Ob, and the    Yenisei. These are three of the 10 largest rivers in the world, and together    they account for 10% of all freshwater discharge to the world's oceans. The    Arctic Ocean is shallow and stratified, which increases its sensitivity to    input from rivers. Previous measurements had    shown that the levels of mercury in the Arctic lower atmosphere fluctuate    over the course of a year, increasing sharply from spring to summer. Jacob,    Sunderland, and their team used a sophisticated model (GEOS-Chem) of the conditions in    the Arctic Ocean and atmosphere to investigate whether variables like melting    ice, interactions with microbes, or the amount of sunlight (which affects    chemical reactions) could account for the difference. Incorporating those    variables, however, was not enough. The GEOS-Chem model,    which is backed by rigorous environmental observations and more than a decade    of scientific review, quantifies the complex nuances of the    ocean-ice-atmosphere environment. It takes into account, for example, ocean    mixing at various depths, the chemistry of mercury in the ocean and the    atmosphere, and the mechanisms of atmospheric deposition and re-emission. When the Harvard team    adapted it for their Arctic mercury simulations, the only adjustment that    could explain the spike in summertime concentrations was the incorporation of    a large source to the Arctic Ocean from circumpolar rivers. This source had    not been recognized previously. As it turns out,    approximately twice as much mercury in the Arctic Ocean originates from the    rivers as from the atmosphere. 
 The    researchers' new model describes the known inputs and outputs of mercury to    the Arctic Ocean. (Image courtesy of Jenny Fisher.) "At this point we can    only speculate as to how the mercury enters the river systems, but it appears    that climate change may play a large role," says Jacob. "As global    temperatures rise, we begin to see areas of permafrost thawing and releasing    mercury that was locked in the soil; we also see the hydrological cycle    changing, increasing the amount of runoff from precipitation that enters the    rivers." "Another    contributing factor," he adds, "could be runoff from gold, silver,    and mercury mines in Siberia, which may be polluting the water nearby. We    know next to nothing about these pollution sources." As the contaminated river    water flows into the Arctic Ocean, Jacob says, the surface layer of the ocean    becomes supersaturated, leading to what scientists call an    "evasion" of mercury from the ocean into the lower atmosphere. "Observing that    telltale supersaturation, and wanting to explain it, is what initially    motivated this study," says Fisher. "Relating it to Arctic rivers    was detective work. The environmental implications of this finding are huge.    It means, for example, that climate change could have a very large impact on    Arctic mercury, larger than the impact of controlling emissions to the    atmosphere. More work is needed now to measure the mercury discharged by    rivers and to determine its origin." Fisher, Jacob, and    Sunderland were joined on this work by co-authors Anne L. Soerensen, a    research fellow at SEAS and HSPH; Helen M. Amos, a graduate student in EPS;    and Alexandra Steffen, an atmospheric mercury specialist at Environment    Canada. The work was supported by    the National Science Foundation's Arctic System    Science Program. Media Contacts: Caroline Perry, Harvard School of    Engineering and Applied Sciences, (617) 496-1351 Todd Datz, Harvard School of Public    Health, (617) 432-8413 
 | 
 



