Life-history traits of two Salvelinus species and mercury concentrations in fish and prey in ten Canadian lakes (2006-2008)


Autoria(s): Swanson, Heidi K; Gantner, Nikolaus; Kidd, Karen A; Muir, Derek CG; Reist, James D
Cobertura

MEDIAN LATITUDE: 68.701694 * MEDIAN LONGITUDE: -106.707389 * SOUTH-BOUND LATITUDE: 68.052000 * WEST-BOUND LONGITUDE: -107.710000 * NORTH-BOUND LATITUDE: 69.380000 * EAST-BOUND LONGITUDE: -106.240000

Data(s)

24/10/2011

Resumo

Mercury concentrations ([Hg]) in Arctic food fish often exceed guidelines for human subsistence consumption. Previous research on two food fish species, Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus) and lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush), indicates that anadromous fish have lower [Hg] than nonanadromous fish, but there have been no intraregional comparisons. Also, no comparisons of [Hg] among anadromous (sea-run), resident (marine access but do not migrate), and landlocked (no marine access) life history types of Arctic char and lake trout have been published. Using intraregional data from 10 lakes in the West Kitikmeot area of Nunavut, Canada, we found that [Hg] varied significantly among species and life history types. Differences among species-life history types were best explained by age-at-size and C:N ratios (indicator of lipid); [Hg] was significantly and negatively related to both. At a standardized fork length of 500 mm, lake trout had significantly higher [Hg] (mean 0.17 µg/g wet wt) than Arctic char (0.09 µg/g). Anadromous and resident Arctic char had significantly lower [Hg] (each 0.04 µg/g) than landlocked Arctic char (0.19 µg/g). Anadromous lake trout had significantly lower [Hg] (0.12 µg/g) than resident lake trout (0.18 µg/g), but no significant difference in [Hg] was seen between landlocked lake trout (0.21 µg/g) and other life history types. Our results are relevant to human health assessments and consumption guidance and will inform models of Hg accumulation in Arctic fish.

Formato

application/zip, 2 datasets

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.837319

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.837319

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Direitos

CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Supplement to: Swanson, Heidi K; Gantner, Nikolaus; Kidd, Karen A; Muir, Derek CG; Reist, James D (2011): Comparison of mercury concentrations in landlocked, resident, and sea-run fish (Salvelinus spp.) from Nunavut, Canada. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, 30(6), 1459-1467, doi:10.1002/etc.517

Palavras-Chave #age; Area; Area in square kilometer; Characteristic; Chl a; Chlorophyll a; d13C, tissue; d15N, tissue; Event; for area and chlorophyll a concentration; fork length; Hg; Hg std dev; International Polar Year (2007-2008); IPY; Lake; life history type; max; mean; MeHg; MeHg std dev; Mercury; Mercury, standard deviation; Methylmercury; Methylmercury, standard deviation; min; N; of fish; of lake; of MeHg in Zooplankton; Perc; Percentage; Reference; Reference/source; S. alpinus age; S. alpinus d13C t; S. alpinus d15N t; S. alpinus fork l; S. alpinus m; S. alpinus std dev; S. namaycush, standard deviation; S. namaycush age; S. namaycush d13C t; S. namaycush d15N t; S. namaycush fork l; S. namaycush m; Salvelinus alpinus, age; Salvelinus alpinus, d13C, tissue; Salvelinus alpinus, d15N, tissue; Salvelinus alpinus, fork length; Salvelinus alpinus, mass; Salvelinus alpinus, standard deviation; Salvelinus namaycush, age; Salvelinus namaycush, d13C, tissue; Salvelinus namaycush, d15N, tissue; Salvelinus namaycush, fork length; Salvelinus namaycush, mass; Salvelinus namaycush, standard deviation; Sample amount; Species; Species, common name; Species common; Species present; Spec present; wet weight
Tipo

Dataset