Becker Daniel J, Chumchal Matthew M, Broders Hugh G, Korstian Jennifer M, Clare Elizabeth L, Rainwater Thomas R, Platt Steven G, Simmons Nancy B, Fenton M Brock
Odum School of Ecology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, United States; Center for the Ecology of Infectious Disease, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, United States.
Department of Biology, Texas Christian University, Fort Worth, TX, United States.
Environ Pollut. 2018 Feb;233:1076-1085. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2017.10.010. Epub 2017 Oct 16.
Mercury (Hg) is a persistent and widespread heavy metal with neurotoxic effects in wildlife. While bioaccumulation of Hg has historically been studied in aquatic food webs, terrestrial consumers can become contaminated with Hg when they feed on aquatic organisms (e.g., emergent aquatic insects, fish, and amphibians). However, the extent to which dietary connectivity to aquatic ecosystems can explain patterns of Hg bioaccumulation in terrestrial consumers has not been well studied. Bats (Order: Chiroptera) can serve as a model system for illuminating the trophic transfer of Hg given their high dietary diversity and foraging links to both aquatic and terrestrial food webs. Here we quantitatively characterize the dietary correlates of long-term exposure to Hg across a diverse local assemblage of bats in Belize and more globally across bat species from around the world with a comparative analysis of hair samples. Our data demonstrate considerable interspecific variation in hair total Hg concentrations in bats that span three orders of magnitude across species, ranging from 0.04 mg/kg in frugivorous bats (Artibeus spp.) to 145.27 mg/kg in the piscivorous Noctilio leporinus. Hg concentrations showed strong phylogenetic signal and were best explained by dietary connectivity of bat species to aquatic food webs. Our results highlight that phylogeny can be predictive of Hg concentrations through similarity in diet and how interspecific variation in feeding strategies influences chronic exposure to Hg and enables movement of contaminants from aquatic to terrestrial ecosystems.
汞(Hg)是一种持久性且广泛存在的重金属,对野生动物具有神经毒性作用。虽然汞的生物累积现象在历史上一直是在水生食物网中进行研究的,但陆地消费者在捕食水生生物(如羽化的水生昆虫、鱼类和两栖动物)时也可能被汞污染。然而,与水生生态系统的饮食联系在多大程度上能够解释陆地消费者体内汞生物累积的模式,尚未得到充分研究。蝙蝠(翼手目)由于其高度多样化的饮食以及与水生和陆地食物网的觅食联系,可作为一个模型系统来阐明汞的营养转移。在此,我们通过对毛发样本的比较分析,定量描述了伯利兹不同本地蝙蝠群落中长期汞暴露的饮食相关性,并在全球范围内对来自世界各地的蝙蝠物种进行了此类分析。我们的数据表明,蝙蝠毛发中总汞浓度存在显著的种间差异,跨物种范围跨越三个数量级,从食果蝠(叶鼻蝠属物种)的0.04毫克/千克到食鱼的兔唇蝠的145.27毫克/千克不等。汞浓度显示出强烈的系统发育信号,并且最好通过蝙蝠物种与水生食物网的饮食联系来解释。我们的结果强调,系统发育可以通过饮食相似性预测汞浓度,以及摄食策略的种间差异如何影响汞的长期暴露,并使污染物能够从水生生态系统转移到陆地生态系统。