Increasing Contaminant Burdens in an Arctic Fish, Burbot (Lota lota), in a Warming Climate

2010 
The temporal patterns of mercury (Hg), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and other contaminants in Arctic aquatic biota are usually attributed to changing atmospheric sources. However, climate variability and change is another means of altering contaminant fate and bioavailability. We show here that the concentrations of Hg and PCBs in Mackenzie River burbot (Lota lota), a top predator fish and important staple food fornorthernCanadiancommunities,haveincreasedsignificantly over the last 25 years despite falling or stable atmospheric concentrations, suggesting that environmental processes subsequent to atmospheric transport are responsible. Using a dated sediment core from a tributary lake near the Mackenzie Riversamplingsite,weshowthatvariationsinHgconcentrations downcore are strongly associated with labile, algal-derived organic matter (OM). Strong temporal correlations between increasingprimaryproductivityandbioticHgandPCBsasreflected by burbot suggest that warming temperatures and reduced ice cover may lead to increased exposure to these contaminants in high trophic level Arctic freshwater biota.
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