Significant biomagnification of methylmercury in songbird nestlings through a rice-based food web: Insights from stable mercury isotopes
Food Chain
Odonata
Oryza
Bayes Theorem
Mercury
Methylmercury Compounds
Bioaccumulation
Songbirds
Mercury Isotopes
Isotopes
Animals
Ecosystem
Water Pollutants, Chemical
Environmental Monitoring
DOI:
10.1016/j.jhazmat.2024.133783
Publication Date:
2024-02-14T09:50:54Z
AUTHORS (8)
ABSTRACT
To elucidate the sources and transfer of mercury (Hg) in terrestrial food chains, particularly in heavily Hg-contaminated rice paddy ecosystems, we collected rice leaves, invertebrates, and Russet Sparrow nestlings from a clear food chain and analyzed the dietary compositions and potential Hg sources using stable Hg isotopes coupled with a Bayesian isotope mixing model (BIMM). Our findings indicated that MeHg exposure is dominant through the dietary route, with caterpillars, grasshoppers, and katydids being the main prey items, while the less provisioned spiders, dragonflies, and mantises contributed the most of the Hg to nestlings. We found minimal MIF but certain MDF in this terrestrial food chain and identified two distinct MeHg sources of dietary exposure and maternal transfer. We firstly found that the dietary route contributed substantially (almost tenfold) more MeHg to the nestlings than maternal transfer. These findings offer new insights into the integration of Hg from the dietary route and maternal transfers, enhancing our understanding of fluctuating Hg exposure risk during the nestling stage. Our study suggested that Hg isotopes combined with BIMM is an effective approach for tracing Hg sources in birds and for gaining in-depth insight into the trophic transfers and biomagnification of MeHg in food chains.
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