Web Release Date: October 14,
Methyl-Mercury Degradation Pathways: A Comparison among Three Mercury-Impacted Ecosystems

and
U.S. Geological Survey, Water Resources Division/MS 480, 345 Middlefield Road, Menlo Park, California 94025, Department of Environmental Toxicology, University of California, Santa Cruz, California 95064, U.S. Geological Survey, Water Resources Division, 8505 Research Way, Middleton, Wisconsin 53562, and The Academy of Natural Sciences, Estuarine Research Center, 10545 Mackall Road, St. Leonard, Maryland 20685
Received for review May 29, 2000
Revised manuscript received August 31, 2000
Accepted September 5, 2000
Abstract:
We examined microbial methylmercury (MeHg) degradation
in sediment of the Florida Everglades, Carson River
(NV), and San Carlos Creek (CA), three freshwater
environments that differ in the extent and type of mercury
contamination and sediment biogeochemistry. Degradation
rate constant (kdeg) values increased with total mercury (Hgt)
contamination both among and within ecosystems. The
highest kdeg's (2.8-5.8 d-1) were observed in San Carlos
Creek, at acid mine drainage impacted sites immediately
downstream of the former New Idria mercury mine, where
Hgt ranged from 4.5 to 21.3 ppm (dry wt). A reductive
degradation pathway (presumably mer-detoxification)
dominated degradation at these sites, as indicated by the
nearly exclusive production of 14CH4 from 14C-MeHg,
under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions. At the
upstream control site, and in the less contaminated
ecosystems (e.g. the Everglades), kdeg's were low (
0.2
d-1) and oxidative demethylation (OD) dominated degradation,
as evident from 14CO2 production. kdeg increased with
microbial CH4 production, organic content, and reduced
sulfur in the Carson River system and increased with
decreasing pH in San Carlos Creek. OD associated CO2
production increased with pore-water SO42- in Everglades
samples but was not attributable to anaerobic methane
oxidation, as has been previously proposed. This ecosystem
comparison indicates that severely contaminated sediments
tend to have microbial populations that actively degrade
MeHg via mer-detoxification, whereas OD occurs in heavily
contaminated sediments as well but dominates in those
less contaminated.
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