SEASONAL INFLUENCES ON PARTITIONING AND TRANSPORT OF TOTAL AND METHYLMERCURY IN RIVERS FROM CONTRASTING WATERSHEDS

Citation
Cl. Babiarz et al., SEASONAL INFLUENCES ON PARTITIONING AND TRANSPORT OF TOTAL AND METHYLMERCURY IN RIVERS FROM CONTRASTING WATERSHEDS, Biogeochemistry, 41(3), 1998, pp. 237-257
Citations number
33
Categorie Soggetti
Environmental Sciences","Geosciences, Interdisciplinary
Journal title
ISSN journal
01682563
Volume
41
Issue
3
Year of publication
1998
Pages
237 - 257
Database
ISI
SICI code
0168-2563(1998)41:3<237:SIOPAT>2.0.ZU;2-Y
Abstract
Seven Wisconsin rivers with contrasting, relatively homogeneous waters hed composition were selected to assess the factors controlling mercur y transport. Together, these watersheds allow comparisons of wetland, forest, urban and agricultural land-uses. Each site was sampled nine t imes between September 1993 and September 1994 to establish seasonal s ignatures and transport processes of total mercury (Hg-T) and methylme rcury (MeHg). Our results clearly show that land use and land cover st rongly influence mercury transport processes. Under base-flow conditio ns, unfiltered MeHg yield varies by a factor of sixteen (12-195 mg km( -2) d(-1)), and increases with the fraction of wetland area in the wat ershed. Elevated mercury yields during high flow are particle-phase as sociated in agricultural sites, but filtered-phase associated in wetla nd sites. Methylmercury represented less than 5% of total mercury mobi lized during the spring thaw across all watersheds. Autumn MeHg yield was generally 11-15% of Hg-T in wetland influenced watersheds, though a maximum of 51% was observed. In some cases, single high-flow events may dominate the annual export of mercury from a watershed. For exampl e, one high-flow event on the agricultural Rattlesnake Creek had the l argest Hg-T and MeHg yield in the study (107 and 2.32 mg km(-2) d(-1), respectively). The mass of mercury transported downstream by this sin gle event was an order of magnitude larger than the eight other (non-e vent) sampling dates combined. These results underscore the importance of watershed characteristics and seasonal events on the fate of mercu ry in fresh water rivers.