Title
ENSO Climate Forcing of the Marine Mercury Cycle in the Peruvian Upwelling Zone Does Not Affect Methylmercury Levels of Marine Avian Top Predators
Date Issued
07 December 2021
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Renedo M.
Point D.
Sonke J.E.
Lorrain A.
Demarcq H.
Médieu A.
Munaron J.M.
Pietri A.
Colas F.
Tremblay Y.
Roy A.
Bertrand S.L.
Publisher(s)
American Chemical Society
Abstract
Climate change is expected to affect marine mercury (Hg) biogeochemistry and biomagnification. Recent modeling work suggested that ocean warming increases methylmercury (MeHg) levels in fish. Here, we studied the influence of El Niño Southern Oscillations (ENSO) on Hg concentrations and stable isotopes in time series of seabird blood from the Peruvian upwelling and oxygen minimum zone. Between 2009 and 2016, La Niña (2011) and El Niño conditions (2015-2016) were accompanied by sea surface temperature anomalies up to 3 °C, oxycline depth change (20-100 m), and strong primary production gradients. Seabird Hg levels were stable and did not co-vary significantly with oceanographic parameters, nor with anchovy biomass, the primary dietary source to seabirds (90%). In contrast, seabird Δ199Hg, proxy for marine photochemical MeHg breakdown, and δ15N showed strong interannual variability (up to 0.8 and 3‰, respectively) and sharply decreased during El Niño. We suggest that lower Δ199Hg during El Niño represents reduced MeHg photodegradation due to the deepening of the oxycline. This process was balanced by equally reduced Hg methylation due to reduced productivity, carbon export, and remineralization. The non-dependence of seabird MeHg levels on strong ENSO variability suggests that marine predator MeHg levels may not be as sensitive to climate change as is currently thought.
Start page
15754
End page
15765
Volume
55
Issue
23
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Ciencias del medio ambiente
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85120942628
PubMed ID
Source
Environmental Science and Technology
ISSN of the container
0013936X
Sponsor(s)
This work was supported by the cooperative agreement between the Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD), the Peruvian Sea Institute (IMARPE), the Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) project “Top Predators as Indicators of Exploited Marine Ecosystem dynamics” (TOPINEME, PI SB), and the International Joint Laboratory DISCOH 1&2 for sample collection and funding for carbon and nitrogen isotope and mercury concentration analysis. We thank Gaël Guillou for carbon and nitrogen stable isotope analysis. We thank the French National Research Agency ANR-17-CE34-0010 project “Unraveling the origin of methylMERcury TOXin in marine ecosystems” (MERTOX, PI DP) for providing financial support for Hg stable isotopes analysis and for the postdoctoral grant provided to M.R.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus