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Mercury concentrations in seabirds from colonies in the northeast Atlantic

โœ Scribed by D. R. Thompson; R. W. Furness; R. T. Barrett


Publisher
Springer
Year
1992
Tongue
English
Weight
675 KB
Volume
23
Category
Article
ISSN
0090-4341

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โœฆ Synopsis


Total mercury concentrations were determined in samples of body feathers from a range of common seabird species breeding at Lรฅtrabjarg, northwest Iceland, St. Kilda, Foula and the Firth of Forth, Scotland and Bleiksรธy, Syltefjord, and Hornรธy, Norway. Seabirds from Lรฅtrabjarg generally exhibited the highest mercury concentrations, with a trend of decreasing mercury concentrations in a southwest to northeast direction in seabirds at the other colonies; seabirds at Hornรธy were generally found to have the lowest mercury concentrations. Some species at the Firth of Forth exhibited relatively elevated mercury concentrations compared to those at Foula and Norwegian sites. Inter-colony differences in diet were thought to be relatively small for most species and unlikely to account for the range of mercury concentrations measured in the seabirds (Lรฅtrabjarg: lowest arithmetic mean mercury concentration in common guillemots Uria aalge, 1.6 micrograms/g, s.d. = 0.6, n = 45; highest arithmetic mean mercury concentration in kittiwakes Rissa tridactyla, 5.5 micrograms/g, s.d. = 1.7, n = 36). The oceanic transport of mercury, together with the effects of anthropogenic inputs of mercury to the northeast Atlantic, and the removal of mercury from the water column via biological activity are discussed as influential factors determining the observed patterns of mercury concentration in seabirds.


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