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Determination of mercury methylation rates using A 203-HG radiotracer technique

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Abstract

A radiotracer method for the determination of mercury (Hg) methylation rates in bulk water and water overlying intact sediment cores has been developed. A sediment core with overlying water is collected in a core tube, the overlying water is spiked with high specific activity 203-Hg radiotracer, and the core is incubated at ambient temperature. Aliquots of the overlying water are removed, the Hg is extracted from the sample, and the activity in the extract is measured. A 10–25 fold sample preconcentration is achieved using a dithizone-chloroform extraction technique and a sodium nitrite back extraction step to separate inorganic Hg(II) from monomethylmercury (MMHg). The use of this technique, in conjunction with high specific activity 203-Hg, has allowed for spiking concentrations in the overlying water of approximately 1 ng Hg/L. This spiking level is about the same concentration as the ambient water overlying the core, thus not significantly perturbing the system. Our technique is a significant improvement over previous methodologies which used 203-Hg spike additions of 1 μg Hg/L or higher. The technique was used to measure Hg methylation rates at the Experimental Lakes Area (ELA) in Ontario, Canada during August of 1993 and at an extensively studied estuarine site in Gulf Breeze, Florida, USA during September, 1993 and June, 1994. Multiple cores were collected and spiked with a range of 1 to 11,800 ng Hg (as 203-Hg) into the overlying water. MMHg production at the ELA site indicated rates of 0.25 to 3.7 pg/cm2/day (0.08 to 2.5 % methylation/day). Results from Gulf Breeze were significantly higher at 1.5 to 425 pg/cm2/day or 0.06 to 18 % methylation/day. These rates are one to three orders of magnitude greater than previously measured “specific rates” in bulk water samples and sediments. A direct comparison of rates with previous sediment methylation assay techniques is not possible, however, because of the significant differences between our methodology and previous assay protocols.

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Stordal, M.C., Gill, G.A. Determination of mercury methylation rates using A 203-HG radiotracer technique. Water Air Soil Pollut 80, 725–734 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01189724

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