X. Lee et al., Total gaseous mercury concentration and flux over a coastal saltmarsh vegetation in Connecticut, USA, ATMOS ENVIR, 34(24), 2000, pp. 4205-4213
The objective of this study is to characterize the ambient total gaseous me
rcury (TGM) concentration (C) at a coastal salt marsh and the TGM flux (F)
between the marsh and the atmosphere using data collected on a near-continu
ous basis from 5 Jun to 8 July, 1997 and from 8 March to 23 July, 1998. In
general, C was lower in the afternoon than at night, which is believed to b
e a result of diurnal variation in the mixing efficiency of the atmospheric
boundary layer. The lack of a significant upward trend from March to July
1998 implies that TGM was removed from the boundary layer at a rate equal o
r greater than the surface emission. Three episodes of low C (0-1 ng m(-3))
occurred in July 1998, each lasting about 3 h. The TGM flux, F, was determ
ined with the micrometeorological aerodynamic method. An episodic event of
large positive F (emission) occurred in early spring of 1998 and appears to
have been triggered by ice melting. It is proposed that three competing me
chanisms - Hg vaporization, oxygen transport via roots, and diffusion into
plants via stomata - may have played a role in the Hg exchange over other p
eriods, resulting in bi-directional exchange of Hg with the atmosphere. Ext
rapolation of the 1998 data to the whole year suggests a weak sink removing
4 +/- 7 mu g Hg m(-2) yr(-1) from the atmosphere, a rate similar in magnit
ude to wet or particulate deposition to the site but much smaller than the
rate of Hg accumulation in the sediment. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All
rights reserved.