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Title
Mercury concentrations in Alaska Pacific halibut muscle relative to stable isotopes of C and N and other biological variables
Author(s)
Bentzen, Rebecca;Castellini, J. Margaret;Gerlach, Robert;Dykstra, Claude;O'Hara, Todd
Published
2016
Publisher
Marine Pollution Bulletin
Published Version DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2016.08.068
Abstract
Total mercury concentrations ([THg]), δ15N and δ13C values were determined in muscle of 693 Pacific halibut caught in International Pacific Halibut Commission setline surveys in Alaska (2002 − 2011). Project goals were to evaluate whether 1) δ15N and δ13C varied with region, age, sex and length of halibut, and 2) muscle [THg] varied with δ15N and δ13C (feeding ecology) while accounting for sex, length, and region. Variation in [THg] was explained, in part, by halibut feeding ecology as [THg] increased with trophic position (increasing δ15N). Halibut from the western Aleutian Island region were the exception, with overall lower δ15N values and significantly higher [THg] than halibut from other Alaskan waters. This [THg] pattern has been observed in other Aleutian biota, possibly the result of northeasterly atmospheric movement of mercury emissions from Asia and/or other local sources and processes. The significantly lower δ15N values for these halibut warrants further investigation of halibut prey.
Keywords
Mercury;C and N stable isotopes;Pacific halibut;Alaska;Feeding ecology
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PUB18889