TRACE-METALS CONTAMINATION OF SEDIMENTS AND ORGANISMS FROM THE SWAN LAKE AREA OF GALVESTON BAY

Authors
Citation
J. Park et Bj. Presley, TRACE-METALS CONTAMINATION OF SEDIMENTS AND ORGANISMS FROM THE SWAN LAKE AREA OF GALVESTON BAY, Environmental pollution, 98(2), 1997, pp. 209-221
Citations number
23
Categorie Soggetti
Environmental Sciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
02697491
Volume
98
Issue
2
Year of publication
1997
Pages
209 - 221
Database
ISI
SICI code
0269-7491(1997)98:2<209:TCOSAO>2.0.ZU;2-J
Abstract
Swan Lake is a sub-bay of the Galveston Bay system. The area received runoff from a tin smelter during the 1940s and 1950s via a dredged cha nnel called the Wah Chang Ditch. The ditch was cut off by a hurricane protection levee in 1968. An industrial waste disposal facility border s the area on the north and the surrounding region is highly industria lized. Consequently, there is ample potential for metal contamination. In this study, concentrations of Ag, Al, As, Cd, Cu, Fe, Hg, Mn, Ni, Pb, Se, Sn and Zn were determined in sediments and organisms (oyster, mussel, snail, crab, fish, shrimp, and marsh grass). The geographic tr ends in trace metal concentrations in sediments strongly suggest that tin smelter residues cause elevations relative to sediment from Galves ton Bay and other Texas bays. Especially high concentrations were foun d along the Wah Chang Ditch, neat Highway 197 and in the NE corner of Swan Lake. Sediment in these areas was as high as 8000 ppm in Sn, 3700 ppm in Pb, and 500 ppm in As. Concentrations varied widely over small space scales and with depth in the sediment column due to differentia l erosion and deposition. Surface sediment was, however, generally muc h less contaminated than deeper sediment, indicating less input of met al recently than in the past. In contrast to other metals, anthropogen ic inputs have not greatly influenced the natural concentrations of Fe , Al and Ni in sediments. Most organisms showed very small spatial var iations in metal concentration. However, the oysters in Swan Lake were found to be enriched in most metals relative to those from Galveston Bay and other US Gulf of Mexico areas. The mussels analyzed for this s tudy did not reflect the highly elevated metal concentrations in the s ediments fi om which they were taken. Iron and Pb concentrations in oy sters seemed to be directly related to sediment concentrations at each location. For the organisms collected, trace metal concentrations wer e generally in the order oysters > snail > crab > shrimp > fish. (C) 1 998 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.