2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2014.04.099
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Total mercury concentrations in anadromous Northern Dolly Varden from the northwestern Canadian Arctic: A historical baseline study

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Cited by 12 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Hg concentrations ranged from 0.001 to 0.62 μg/g; excluding three fish where Hg N0.2 μg/g (two from Paulatuk char, one from Cambridge Bay) Hg concentrations were exceedingly low averaging 0.05 ± 0.02 μg/g over the study area. Hg concentrations at individual sites and times generally were positively correlated (Table S3) with fish length (37 of 49 analyses, 10 significant), weight (34 times, 9 significant), age (40 times, 10 significant) and nitrogen isotope ratio (32 times, 5 significant with one significant negative correlation) as has been observed by others (Gantner et al, 2010a;Lescord et al, 2015;Tran et al, 2015); this indicates that larger, older and fish feeding at higher trophic levels tend to have the highest Hg concentrations. Correlations with carbon isotope ratio were both positive (26 times, 2 significant) and negative (21 times, 3 significant) and for locations such as Cambridge Bay, varied substantially between years possibly reflecting broad feeding patterns in nearshore and offshore locations and benthic and pelagic diets.…”
Section: Broad Spatial Patternssupporting
confidence: 70%
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“…Hg concentrations ranged from 0.001 to 0.62 μg/g; excluding three fish where Hg N0.2 μg/g (two from Paulatuk char, one from Cambridge Bay) Hg concentrations were exceedingly low averaging 0.05 ± 0.02 μg/g over the study area. Hg concentrations at individual sites and times generally were positively correlated (Table S3) with fish length (37 of 49 analyses, 10 significant), weight (34 times, 9 significant), age (40 times, 10 significant) and nitrogen isotope ratio (32 times, 5 significant with one significant negative correlation) as has been observed by others (Gantner et al, 2010a;Lescord et al, 2015;Tran et al, 2015); this indicates that larger, older and fish feeding at higher trophic levels tend to have the highest Hg concentrations. Correlations with carbon isotope ratio were both positive (26 times, 2 significant) and negative (21 times, 3 significant) and for locations such as Cambridge Bay, varied substantially between years possibly reflecting broad feeding patterns in nearshore and offshore locations and benthic and pelagic diets.…”
Section: Broad Spatial Patternssupporting
confidence: 70%
“…δ 13 C was among the lowest values, (−23.3 ± 0.5‰ and −23.4 ± 1.3‰, respectively) suggesting significant terrestrial carbon sources from the Mackenzie River; similar δ 13 C ratios were observed by Tran et al (2015). However, with terrestrial carbon having a δ 13 C ratio of −29‰ and marine phytoplankton −25‰ (Dunton et al, 2006), marine benthic carbon sources must have been significant as well.…”
Section: Coastal Nwtmentioning
confidence: 69%
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