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Heavy metals in muscles. Mercury (Hg)

BarentsPortal

The Joint Norwegian-Russian Environmental Status Report for the Barents Sea

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Home MAP Info Service Pollution Contaminants in birds Heavy metals in muscles. Mercury (Hg)

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Heavy metals in muscles. Mercury (Hg)

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Mercury is the single most toxic element for seabirds. Mercury, along with Cadmium and lead, is one of the heavy metals that are of environmental concern as it can be toxic at levels only moderately elevated above natural ambient levels.

The organic form of methyl-mercury is efficiently taken up by animals and acts as a neuro-toxic compound. The levels found in muscle tissue of different seabird species are lower than critical levels. However, the total mercury concentration is a poor indicator for toxic evaluation, as organic mercury is thought to be more toxic to animals at high tropic levels than inorganic mercury.

In the background data for the contaminant maps we were not able to find any significant difference between regions or species. It is however reported that mercury biomagnifies with the result that species higher up in the food chain have higher mercury levels. The contaminant maps and the background data indicate that cormorant and razorbill have higher levels of Hg than the other birds. These observations are only based on one cormorant and one mean level from five razorbills. Further bird samples are needed in order to make any conclusions. Differences between regions were not found.

 

Levels of Hg in Black guillemot. Levels of Hg in Brunnichs guillemot. Levels of Hg in Common eider. Levels of Hg in Common guillemot. Levels of Hg in Fulmar. Levels of Hg in Glaucouc gull. Levels of Hg in Herring gull. Levels of Hg in King eider. Levels of Hg in Kittiwake. Levels of Hg in Little auk. Levels of Hg in Puffin.
Last Updated ( Monday, 25 January 2010 11:12 )  

Status Report. The authors

Puffins in the Barents Sea. Photo NP 

More than 100 experts from a total of 9 Russian and 20 Norwegian institutions have participated in the preparation of the report, and the work has been organized in 13 expert groups. The work has been led by Sevmorgeo and PINRO on Russian side and on Norwegian side by the Institute of Marine Research and the Norwegian Polar Institute..

Find author name here...

The Russian - Norwegian cooperation

Waving kelp at the Norwegian coast. Photo IMR

BarentsPortal is a project developed under the Joint Russian - Norwegian Commission on Environmental Cooperation. The joint environmental report is a co-operation project between the Joint Russian - Norwegian Commission on Environmental Cooperation and the Joint Russian-Norwegian Fisheries Commission

Read about Joint Russian - Norwegian Commission on Environmental Cooperation (unfortunately only in Norwegian - please use web based translation)

Read about the Joint Russian-Norwegian Fisheries Commission

Contaminants in seabird. Metadata

The level of contaminants in the Barents region marine environment (biota and sediment) has been documented during the last decades both by Russian and Norwegian scientists. Lately, new compounds has been observed and documented in frame of national and international monitoring programs. However, the documentation of contaminants trends has been fragmented and somewhat difficult to follow, and there has been limited compilation and presentation of such data.

BarentsPortal financed in 2009 a project with goals just to do a compilation of the most relevant Russian and Norwegian contaminants data on seabirds in the Barents Sea, and presents them in overview maps.The are currently no maps available in the MAP Service.

Read the full report; Seabirds contaminant data: Compilation and portraying of Norwegian and Russian data on contaminant levels in the ecosystems of the Barents, Pechora and White Sea. Seabirds.

What are POPs?

Stop POPs

Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) are organic chemical substances, that is, they are carbon-based. They possess a particular combination of physical and chemical properties such that, once released into the environment, they:

  • remain intact for exceptionally long periods of time (many years)
  • are toxic to both humans and wildlife

What are Heavy metals?

Stop POPs

Some heavy metals elements are very toxic for humans and wildlife. They are carcinogenic or toxic, affecting, among others, the central nervous system (Mn, Hg, Pb, As), the kidneys or liver (Hg, Pb, Cd, Cu) or skin, bones, or teeth (Ni, Cd, Cu, Cr).

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