Drevnick Paul E, Lamborg Carl H, Horgan Martin J
University of Michigan Biological Station and School of Natural Resources and Environment, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
Environ Toxicol Chem. 2015 Apr;34(4):931-4. doi: 10.1002/etc.2883. Epub 2015 Feb 2.
Mercury is a toxic trace metal that can accumulate to levels that threaten human and environmental health. Models and empirical data suggest that humans are responsible for a great deal of the mercury actively cycling in the environment at present. Thus, one might predict that the concentration of mercury in fish should have increased dramatically since the Industrial Revolution. Evidence in support of this hypothesis has been hard to find, however, and some studies have suggested that analyses of fish show no change in mercury concentration. By compiling and re-analyzing published reports on yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacares) caught near Hawaii (USA) over the past half century, the authors found that the concentration of mercury in these fish currently is increasing at a rate of at least 3.8% per year. This rate of increase is consistent with a model of anthropogenic forcing on the mercury cycle in the North Pacific Ocean and suggests that fish mercury concentrations are keeping pace with current loading increases to the ocean. Future increases in mercury in yellowfin tuna and other fishes can be avoided by reductions in atmospheric mercury emissions from point sources.
汞是一种有毒的痕量金属,其累积水平会威胁人类健康和环境。模型和实证数据表明,人类是目前环境中大量活跃循环的汞的主要来源。因此,可以预测,自工业革命以来,鱼类体内汞的浓度应该会急剧上升。然而,很难找到支持这一假设的证据,一些研究表明,对鱼类的分析显示汞浓度没有变化。通过汇编和重新分析过去半个世纪在美国夏威夷附近捕获的黄鳍金枪鱼(Thunnus albacares)的已发表报告,作者发现这些鱼类体内汞的浓度目前正以每年至少3.8%的速度增加。这种增加速度与北太平洋汞循环的人为强迫模型一致,表明鱼类汞浓度与目前海洋中汞负荷的增加保持同步。通过减少点源大气汞排放,可以避免未来黄鳍金枪鱼和其他鱼类体内汞含量的增加。