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AGU: Global Biogeochemical Cycles

 

Keywords

  • air-sea exchange
  • mercury
  • ocean
  • preindustrial
  • rivers
  • uncertainty

Index Terms

  • Oceanography: General: Numerical modeling
  • Oceanography: General: Marine pollution
  • Oceanography: General: Ocean data assimilation and reanalysis
  • Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Air/sea constituent fluxes
Abstract
Cited By (3)
 

Abstract

Human impacts on open ocean mercury concentrations

Elsie M. Sunderland

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

Robert P. Mason

University of Connecticut, Department of Marine Sciences, Groton, Connecticut, USA

We develop an empirically constrained multicompartment box model for mercury cycling in open ocean regions to investigate changes in concentrations resulting from anthropogenic perturbations of the global mercury cycle. Using Monte Carlo simulations, we explicitly consider the effects of variability in measured parameters on modeled seawater concentrations. Our simulations show that anthropogenic enrichment in all surface (25%) and deep ocean waters (11%) is lower than global atmospheric enrichment (300–500%) and varies considerably among geographic regions, ranging from >60% in parts of the Atlantic and Mediterranean to <1% in the deep Pacific. Model results indicate that open ocean mercury concentrations do not rapidly equilibrate with atmospheric deposition and on average will increase if anthropogenic emissions remain at their present level. We estimate the temporal lag between changes in atmospheric deposition and ocean mercury concentrations will vary from decades in most of the Atlantic up to centuries in parts of the Pacific.

Received 2 November 2006; accepted 30 August 2007; published 27 December 2007.

Citation: Sunderland, E. M., and R. P. Mason (2007), Human impacts on open ocean mercury concentrations, Global Biogeochem. Cycles, 21, GB4022, doi:10.1029/2006GB002876.

Cited By

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