2014
DOI: 10.1007/s00267-013-0224-4
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Fish Mercury and Surface Water Sulfate Relationships in the Everglades Protection Area

Abstract: Few published studies present data on relationships between fish mercury and surface or pore water sulfate concentrations, particularly on an ecosystem-wide basis. Resource managers can use these relationships to identify the sulfate conditions that contain fish with health-concerning total mercury (THg) levels and to evaluate the role of sulfate in methyl-mercury (MeHg) production. In this study, we derived relationships between THg in three fish trophic levels (mosquitofish, sunfish, and age-1 largemouth bas… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…In fact, we suggest that their data demonstrate that no predictable relationship exists between sulfate and THg in fish of the Everglades. As a result, the management guidance in Gabriel et al (2014) for Hg and S in the Everglades is not justified by the data and information provided.…”
mentioning
confidence: 79%
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“…In fact, we suggest that their data demonstrate that no predictable relationship exists between sulfate and THg in fish of the Everglades. As a result, the management guidance in Gabriel et al (2014) for Hg and S in the Everglades is not justified by the data and information provided.…”
mentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Even though Gabriel et al (2014) brought significant detail to the Materials and Methods, several key topics were overlooked that could materially influence the conclusions drawn by the authors. Topics lacking adequate coverage include: inclusion of monitoring locations outside of the actual EvPA, pairing fish tissue and surface water sulfate monitoring locations, the comparability of data normalizations, and most important, the lack of quantitative statistics.…”
mentioning
confidence: 93%
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“…Sulfate stimulates the metabolic pathways of sulfate reducing bacteria in sediments, co-metabolizing inorganic mercury into methylmercury, a persistent, bioaccumulative and neuro-toxic compound that impacts the aquatic food chain. A relationship between surface water sulfate and total mercury in fish has identified water sulfate management as a target for mercury risk management in the Everglades Protection Area [53]. Over 4000 km 2 are contaminated with mercury and the Everglades has some of the highest observed mercury levels in fish for the U.S. [1,54].…”
Section: Water Quality Impactsmentioning
confidence: 99%