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Mercury and selenium loading in mountaintop mining impacted alkaline streams and riparian food webs

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Abstract

Coal is naturally enriched in trace elements, including mercury (Hg) and selenium (Se). Alkaline mine drainage from mountaintop mining valley fill (MTM-VF)—the dominant form of surface coal mining in Appalachia, USA—releases large quantities of Se into streams draining mined catchments, resulting in elevated bioaccumulation of Se in aquatic and riparian organisms. Yet, the release of Hg into these streams from MTM-VF has not yet been studied. We measured total Hg, methylmercury (MeHg), and Se in stream water, sediment, biofilm, cranefly larvae, and riparian spiders in alkaline streams (pH range 6.9–8.4) across a mining gradient (0–98% watershed mined) in central Appalachia. Hg concentrations ranged from below detection limit (BDL)-6.9 ng/L in unfiltered water, BDL-0.05 µg/g in bulk sediment, 0.016–0.098 µg/g in biofilm, 0.038–0.11 µg/g in cranefly larvae, and 0.046–0.25 µg/g in riparian spiders. In contrast to Se, we found that Hg concentrations in all environmental compartments were not related to the proportion of the watershed mined, suggesting that Hg is not being released from, nor bioaccumulating within, MTM-VF watersheds. We also did not find clear evidence for a reduction in Hg methylation or bioaccumulation under elevated Se concentrations: water, sediment, biofilm, and riparian spiders exhibited no relationship between Hg and Se; only cranefly larvae exhibited a negative relationship (p = 0.0002, r2 = 0.42). We suggest that the type of surface mining matrix rock, with resultant alkaline or acid mine drainage, is important for the speciation, mobility, and bioaccumulation of trace elements within watersheds affected by mining activities.

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Acknowledgements

We thank Eric Moore and Nick Huffman for field assistance; Brooke Hassett, Mario Montesdeoca, Kim Hutchison, Claire Thomas, Geoff Millard, and Nelson Rivera for laboratory assistance; and David Walters and Collin Eagles-Smith for their expertise on contaminant transport. We also appreciate the comments from two anonymous reviewers. This research was funded by a National Science Foundation EAR Hydrologic Sciences Grant 1417405 to Emily Bernhardt and Brian McGlynn and a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship to Jacqueline Gerson.

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Correspondence to Jacqueline R. Gerson.

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10533_2020_690_MOESM1_ESM.docx

Electronic supplementary material 1 (DOCX 322 kb)—Supporting information contains detailed methods for sample processing and quality control, Visual MINTEQ modeling, Se speciation methodology and results, a figure depicting sampling locations (Figure S1) a figure depicting sediment core element concentrations (Figure S2), a figure depicting patterns in Hg and Se concentrations across Appalachian streams (Figure S3), a figure depicting Se speciation data (Figure S4), a table with concentration ranges for Hg and Se in all samples (Table S1), results from Visual MINTEQ equilibrium speciation modeling, and a table with Visual MINTEQ model results (Table S3).

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Gerson, J.R., Naslund, L.C., Liu, YT. et al. Mercury and selenium loading in mountaintop mining impacted alkaline streams and riparian food webs. Biogeochemistry 150, 109–122 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10533-020-00690-7

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10533-020-00690-7

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