Karimi Roxanne, Chen Celia Y, Folt Carol L
Department of Biological Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH, United States.
Department of Biological Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH, United States.
Sci Total Environ. 2016 Sep 15;565:211-221. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.04.162. Epub 2016 May 9.
Mercury (Hg) bioaccumulation in fish poses well-known health risks to wildlife and humans through fish consumption. Yet fish Hg concentrations are highly variable, and key factors driving this variability remain unclear. One little studied source of variation is the influence of habitat-specific feeding on Hg accumulation in lake fish. However, this is likely important because most lake fish feed in multiple habitats during their lives, and the Hg and caloric content of prey from different habitats can differ. This study used a three-pronged approach to investigate the extent to which habitat-specific prey determine differences in Hg bioaccumulation in fish. This study first compared Hg concentrations in common nearshore benthic invertebrates and pelagic zooplankton across five lakes and over the summer season in one lake, and found that pelagic zooplankton generally had higher Hg concentrations than most benthic taxa across lakes, and over a season in one lake. Second, using a bioenergetics model, the effects of prey caloric content from habitat-specific diets on fish growth and Hg accumulation were calculated. This model predicted that the consumption of benthic prey results in lower fish Hg concentrations due to higher prey caloric content and growth dilution (high weight gain relative to Hg from food), in addition to lower prey Hg levels. Third, using data from the literature, links between fish Hg content and the degree of benthivory, were examined, and showed that benthivory was associated with reduced Hg concentrations in lake fish. Taken together, these findings support the hypothesis that higher Hg content and lower caloric content make pelagic zooplankton prey greater sources of Hg for fish than nearshore benthic prey in lakes. Hence, habitat-specific foraging is likely to be a strong driver of variation in Hg levels within and between fish species.
鱼类体内汞(Hg)的生物累积通过食用鱼类对野生动物和人类构成了众所周知的健康风险。然而,鱼类体内汞的浓度变化很大,导致这种变化的关键因素仍不清楚。一个研究较少的变异来源是特定栖息地摄食对湖泊鱼类汞积累的影响。然而,这可能很重要,因为大多数湖泊鱼类在其生命过程中会在多个栖息地觅食,而且来自不同栖息地的猎物的汞含量和热量含量可能不同。本研究采用了三管齐下的方法来调查特定栖息地的猎物在多大程度上决定了鱼类汞生物累积的差异。本研究首先比较了五个湖泊以及一个湖泊夏季常见的近岸底栖无脊椎动物和浮游动物中的汞浓度,发现浮游动物的汞浓度通常高于大多数湖泊底栖类群以及一个湖泊一个季节中的汞浓度。其次,使用生物能量学模型,计算了特定栖息地饮食中猎物热量含量对鱼类生长和汞积累的影响。该模型预测,食用底栖猎物会导致鱼类汞浓度降低,这是由于猎物热量含量较高和生长稀释(相对于食物中的汞而言体重增加较多),此外猎物的汞含量也较低。第三,利用文献数据,研究了鱼类汞含量与底栖食性程度之间的联系,结果表明底栖食性与湖泊鱼类汞浓度降低有关。综上所述,这些发现支持了以下假设:较高的汞含量和较低的热量含量使浮游动物猎物比湖泊近岸底栖猎物成为鱼类汞的更大来源。因此,特定栖息地的觅食行为可能是鱼类物种内部和物种之间汞水平变化的一个重要驱动因素。