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
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.