Project: Collaborative Research: Isotopic insights to mercury in marine food webs and how it varies with ocean biogeochemistry

Acronym/Short Name:Hg_Biogeochemistry
Project Duration:2014-08 -2017-07
Geolocation:Pacific Subtropical Gyre, Station ALOHA 22.75N 158W; equatorial Pacific (10N 155W, 5N 155W)

Description

NSF award abstract:
Mercury is a pervasive trace element that exists in several states in the marine environment, including monomethylmercury (MMHg), a neurotoxin that bioaccumulates in marine organisms and poses a human health threat. Understanding the fate of mercury in the ocean and resulting impacts on ocean food webs requires understanding the mechanisms controlling the depths at which mercury chemical transformations occur. Preliminary mercury analyses on nine species of marine fish from the North Pacific Ocean indicated that intermediate waters are an important entry point for MMHg into open ocean food webs. To elucidate the process controlling this, researchers will examine mercury dynamics in regions with differing vertical dissolved oxygen profiles, which should influence depths of mercury transformation. Results of the study will aid in a better understanding of the pathways by which mercury enters the marine food chain and can ultimately impact humans. This project will provide training for graduate and undergraduate students, and spread awareness on oceanic mercury through public outreach and informal science programs.

Mercury isotopic variations can provide insight into a wide variety of environmental processes. Isotopic compositions of mercury display mass-dependent fractionation (MDF) during most biotic and abiotic chemical reactions and mass-independent fractionation (MIF) during photochemical radical pair reactions. The unusual combination of MDF and MIF can provide information on reaction pathways and the biogeochemical history of mercury. Results from preliminary research provide strong evidence that net MMHg formation occurred below the surface mixed layer in the pycnocline and suggested that MMHg in low oxygen intermediate waters is an important entry point for mercury into open ocean food webs. These findings highlight the critical need to understand how MMHg levels in marine biota will respond to changes in atmospheric mercury emissions, deposition of inorganic mercury to the surface ocean, and hypothesized future expansion of oxygen minimum zones. Using field collections across ecosystems with contrasting biogeochemistry and mercury isotope fractionation experiments researchers will fill key knowledge gaps in mercury biogeochemistry. Results of the proposed research will enable scientists to assess the biogeochemical controls on where in the water column mercury methylation and demethylation likely occur.

Related background publication with supplemental data section:
Joel D. Blum, Brian N. Popp, Jeffrey C. Drazen, C. Anela Choy & Marcus W. Johnson. 2013. Methylmercury production below the mixed layer in the North Pacific Ocean. Nature Geoscience 6, 879–884. doi:10.1038/ngeo1918


DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
Particles and Zooplankton Amino Acid Compound Specific Isotope Analyses (AA-CSIA) and zooplankton biomass at Station ALOHA and the Equatorial Pacific from R/V Kilo Moana cruises KM1407, KM1418, & KM1515 from 2014-20152020-03-19Final no updates expected
234Th flux in epipelagic waters at Station ALOHA and the Equatorial Pacific from R/V Kilo Moana cruises KM1407, KM1418, & KM1515 during 2014-20152020-03-19Final no updates expected
Mercury stable isotope values for precipitation collected around Station ALOHA from 2005 to 20142020-02-21Final no updates expected
Mercury stable isotope values for marine particles from R/V Kilo Moana cruises KM1418, KM1407 and KM1506 around station ALOHA in 2014 and 20152020-02-21Final no updates expected
Reference materials analyzed in the laboratory for THg isotopic composition2020-02-21Final no updates expected
Mercury stable isotope values for zooplankton collected during R/V Kilo Moana cruises KM1418 and KM1506 around Station ALOHA in 2014 and 20152020-02-21Final no updates expected
Amino acid compound specific isotope values for micronekton from R/V Kilo Moana KM1109, KM1123, KM1407, KM1418, and other cruises in the Central North Pacific, Station ALOHA, Tropical Pacific, 2007-20142018-12-05Final no updates expected
Amino acid compound specific isotope values for particles from R/V Kilo Moana KM1407 and KM1418 in the Central North Pacific, Station ALOHA, Tropical Pacific, Feb and Sept. 20142018-12-05Final no updates expected
CTD profiles collected during multiple cruises on the R/V Kilo Moana around the ALOHA observatory and South Pacific Gyre from 2014-20152017-02-17Final no updates expected

People

Lead Principal Investigator: Brian N. Popp
University of Hawai'i (UH)

Principal Investigator: Claudia R. Benitez-Nelson

Principal Investigator: Joel D. Blum
University of Michigan

Co-Principal Investigator: Jeffrey C. Drazen
University of Hawai'i (UH)

Co-Principal Investigator: Cecelia Hannides
University of Hawai'i (UH)

Co-Principal Investigator: Kanesa Seraphin
University of Hawai'i (UH)

Contact: Brian N. Popp
University of Hawai'i (UH)


Data Management Plan

DMP_OCE-1433846,1433710,1433313_Popp.pdf (83.72 KB)
06/19/2015