Global distribution and environmental drivers of methylmercury production in sediments

  • Shu Shen Dai
  • , Ziming Yang
  • , Yindong Tong
  • , Long Chen
  • , Si Yuan Liu
  • , Rong Pan
  • , Yanbin Li
  • , Cui Jing Zhang
  • , Yu Rong Liu*
  • , Qiaoyun Huang
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

29 Scopus citations

Abstract

Neurotoxic methylmercury (MeHg) in environments poses substantial risks to human health. Saturated sediments are basic sources of MeHg in food chains; however, distribution patterns and environmental drivers of MeHg at a global scale remain largely unexplored. Here, we characterized global patterns of MeHg distribution and environmental drivers of MeHg production based on 495 sediment samples across five typical ecosystems from the literature (1995–2018) and our own field survey. Our results showed the MeHg concentration ranged from 0.009 to 55.7 μg kg−1 across the different ecosystems, and the highest MeHg concentration and Hg methylation potential were from the sediments of paddy and marine environments, respectively. Further, using combined analysis of random forest and structural equation modeling, we identified temperature and precipitation as important regulators of MeHg production after accounting for the well-known drivers including Hg availability and sediment geochemistry. More importantly, we found increased MeHg production in sediments with elevated mean annual Hg precipitation, and warmer temperature could also accelerate MeHg production by facilitating activities of microbial methylators. Together, this work advances our understanding of global MeHg distribution in sediments and environmental drivers, which are fundamental to the prediction and management of MeHg production and its potential health risk globally.

Original languageEnglish
Article number124700
JournalJournal of Hazardous Materials
Volume407
DOIs
StatePublished - 5 Apr 2021
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Climatic drivers
  • Large-scale
  • Methylmercury
  • Precipitation
  • Sediments

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