Role of Sediment Resuspension on Estuarine Suspended Particulate Mercury Dynamics
Geologic Sediments
13. Climate action
Mercury
14. Life underwater
Methylmercury Compounds
Delaware
01 natural sciences
Water Pollutants, Chemical
6. Clean water
Environmental Monitoring
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
DOI:
10.1021/acs.est.8b01920
Publication Date:
2018-06-21T14:58:29Z
AUTHORS (3)
ABSTRACT
Coastal sediments are an important site for transient and long-term mercury (Hg) storage, and they foster a geochemical environment optimal for Hg methylation. Therefore, efforts have been taken to constrain the role of sediments as a source of methylmercury (MeHg) to the estuarine water column. This study employed the Gust Microcosm Erosion Core system capable of quantifying particle removal from undisturbed cores under measurable shear stress conditions to assess particulate Hg and MeHg exchange between sediments and the water column. Samples were collected from organic-rich and organic-poor sediment types from the mid- and lower Delaware Bay. It was found that bulk sediment samples from organic-rich systems overpredict total Hg and MeHg release to the water column, whereas organic-poor sediments underpredict the exchange. In general, organic-rich sediments in shallow environments have the most impact on surface particle dynamics. There is little evidence to suggest that MeHg formed in the sediments is released to the water column via particulate exchange, and therefore, nonsedimentary sources likely control MeHg levels in this estuarine water column.
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