TY - JOUR
T1 - Multidimensional Drivers of Mercury Distribution in Global Surface Soils
T2 - Insights from a Global Standardized Field Survey
AU - Liu, Yu Rong
AU - Guo, Long
AU - Yang, Ziming
AU - Xu, Zeng
AU - Zhao, Jiating
AU - Wen, Shu Hai
AU - Delgado-Baquerizo, Manuel
AU - Chen, Long
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2023/8/22
Y1 - 2023/8/22
N2 - Soil stores a large amount of mercury (Hg) that has adverse effects on human health and ecosystem safety. Significant uncertainties still exist in revealing environmental drivers of soil Hg accumulation and predicting global Hg distribution owing to the lack of field data from global standardized analyses. Here, we conducted a global standardized field survey and explored a holistic understanding of the multidimensional environmental drivers of Hg accumulation in global surface soils. Hg content in surface soils from our survey ranges from 3.8 to 618.2 μg kg-1 with an average of 74.0 μg kg-1 across the globe. Atmospheric Hg deposition, particularly vegetation-induced elemental Hg0 deposition, is the major source of surface soil Hg. Soil organic carbon serves as the major substrate for sequestering Hg in surface soils and is significantly influenced by agricultural management, litterfall, and elevation. For human activities, changing land-use could be a more important contributor than direct anthropogenic emissions. Our prediction of a new global Hg distribution highlights the hot spots (high Hg content) in East Asia, the Northern Hemispheric temperate/boreal regions, and tropical areas, while the cold spots (low Hg content) are in arid regions. The holistic understanding of multidimensional environmental drivers helps to predict the Hg distribution in global surface soils under a changing global environment.
AB - Soil stores a large amount of mercury (Hg) that has adverse effects on human health and ecosystem safety. Significant uncertainties still exist in revealing environmental drivers of soil Hg accumulation and predicting global Hg distribution owing to the lack of field data from global standardized analyses. Here, we conducted a global standardized field survey and explored a holistic understanding of the multidimensional environmental drivers of Hg accumulation in global surface soils. Hg content in surface soils from our survey ranges from 3.8 to 618.2 μg kg-1 with an average of 74.0 μg kg-1 across the globe. Atmospheric Hg deposition, particularly vegetation-induced elemental Hg0 deposition, is the major source of surface soil Hg. Soil organic carbon serves as the major substrate for sequestering Hg in surface soils and is significantly influenced by agricultural management, litterfall, and elevation. For human activities, changing land-use could be a more important contributor than direct anthropogenic emissions. Our prediction of a new global Hg distribution highlights the hot spots (high Hg content) in East Asia, the Northern Hemispheric temperate/boreal regions, and tropical areas, while the cold spots (low Hg content) are in arid regions. The holistic understanding of multidimensional environmental drivers helps to predict the Hg distribution in global surface soils under a changing global environment.
KW - atmospheric deposition
KW - global change
KW - land-use
KW - mercury (Hg)
KW - surface soils
KW - vegetation
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85167795349
U2 - 10.1021/acs.est.3c04313
DO - 10.1021/acs.est.3c04313
M3 - 文章
C2 - 37506289
AN - SCOPUS:85167795349
SN - 0013-936X
VL - 57
SP - 12442
EP - 12452
JO - Environmental Science and Technology
JF - Environmental Science and Technology
IS - 33
ER -