451 / 2024-09-17 11:05:52
Temperature induced primary productivity variation controls mercury accumulation in the Northwestern Pacific Ocean
Mercury accumulation, Northwestern Pacific Ocean, primary productivity, Total organic carbon, Sea surface temperature
Session 57 - Contaminants across the marine continuum: behavior, fate and ecological risk assessment
Abstract Accepted
Zhengwen Zhou / Ocean University of China
Qin Shu / Ocean University of China
Yonghui Cui / Ocean University of China
Huiling Wang / Ocean University of China
Yingjun Wang / Shandong University
Holger Hintelmann / Trent University
Yongguang Yin / Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Guangliang Liu / Florida International University
Yong Cai / Florida International University
Meixun Zhao / Ocean University of China
Xiaotong Xiao / Ocean University of China
Yanbin Li / Ocean University of China
Deep ocean sediments serve as a crucial mercury (Hg) sink in the global Hg cycle. Phytoplankton plays an important role in sequestering Hg from the atmosphere and the subsequent deposition of Hg into the sediment. However, the impact of primary productivity on Hg accumulation in the deep ocean remains poorly understood. Here we investigated the effects of marine organic carbon (OC) (representing the primary productivity) on Hg contents (especially the atmospheric source Hg) and isotope composition over the past several millennia in sediment cores from the Northwestern Pacific Ocean (NWPO). Significant correlations were observed between the Hg contents, δ202Hg, and marine OC, indicating that primary production controls Hg accumulation in the NWPO. Sea surface temperature (SST) was found to significantly affect the TOC, and Hg contents in three of five investigated cores, suggesting that temperature-driven increase in primary productivity can enhance the accumulation of atmospheric depositional Hg into the sediments. However, other factors (e.g., nutrients, light) controlling primary productivity can weaken the effects of temperature on productivity. Our findings reveal that rising SST has the potential to promote Hg accumulation in deep sea sediments via enhancing primary productivity and diminish the amount of Hg in the water column, thereby reducing its toxic effects on the marine organisms.