Sea Otters, Mercury, and Monitoring Climate Change
Journal Title: Advances in Clinical Toxicology - Year 2022, Vol 7, Issue 1
Abstract
An increase in mobility of heavy metals, like mercury (Hg), has the potential to be one of the climate change related impacts on Arctic and sub-Arctic ecosystems. Sea level rise and flooding events in high latitude coastal ecosystems could increase the bioavailability of contaminants such as mercury. Mercury concentrations have been used as an indicator of past exposure to heavy metals in ancient Pacific cod and here we report on concentrations in archeologically recovered sea otter bones (Enhydra lutris). Methods utilizing stable isotope ratios can be used to reconstruct ancient food webs and help identify prey which may have bioaccumulated high concentrations of mercury. Modern sea otters have δ13C, δ15N, and mercury values corresponding largely to a benthic diet. Conversely, if higher δ15N and mercury levels were found in ancient sea otter bones located in a coastal ecosystem, these increases may be associated with rising sea level following the last glacial maximum. These data place present day and projected climate change related perturbations, like sea level rise, in a historical context
Authors and Affiliations
Duffy LK*, Hirons AC, Schaaf JM, McRoy CP, Murray MS and Muelken MV
The Menace of Lead Poisoning in Pakistan
Environmental pollution has been increased many times due to increase in population, industrialization and urbanization; in some places, it becomes toxic to living organisms. Among the pollutants, heavy metals pose th...
Obesity, Diets and Pollution
In the past decades, the problem of obesity has grown exponentially, particularly in the industrialised countries, so that in the next few years the statistical predictions of the World Health Organisation (WHO) estim...
Epigenotoxicity of Endocrine-Disrupting Chemicals Makes Inroads to a Paradigm Shift in the Risk Assessment of Pesticides
The most ferocious chronic effect a pesticide could have is disrupting the functions mediated by the endocrine system. When this happens during early development of the life cycle, it leads to profound and lasting adver...
Chronic Fumonisin Intake Induces Erythrocyte Osmotic Fragility
Fumonisin B1 (FB1) is a mycotoxin that appears as a frequent maize and maize-based foods contaminant in Argentina. It has an inhibitory effect of ceramide synthetase, a key enzyme in the biosynthesis of sphingolipids, i...
Is Genotoxicity of Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor Agonists Due to Oxidative Stress Via Agonistic Pathways?
In order to investigate the relationship between genotoxicity and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) agonistic effects, we conducted two kinds of comet assays (cellular and acellular), a micronucleus (MN)...