posted on 2019-11-06, 18:39authored byAbram B. Fleishman, Rachael A. Orben, Nobuo Kokubun, Alexis Will, Rosana Paredes, Joshua T. Ackerman, Akinori Takahashi, Alexander S. Kitaysky, Scott A. Shaffer
Marine
methylmercury concentrations vary geographically and with
depth, exposing organisms to different mercury levels in different
habitats. Red-legged kittiwakes (Rissa brevirostris), a specialist predator, forage on fish and invertebrates from the
mesopelagic zone, a part of the ocean with elevated methylmercury
concentrations. We used kittiwakes as bioindicators of MeHg concentrations
in remote mesopelagic systems by examining how wintering distribution
and habitat affected kittiwakes’ mercury exposure. In 2011–2017,
we sampled winter-grown feathers on St. George Island, Alaska, from
birds equipped with geolocation loggers. We measured total mercury
(THg) and nitrogen stable isotopes in nape and head feathers grown
during winter, respectively. THg concentration of kittiwake nape feathers
averaged 4.61 ± 0.97 μg/g dry weight. Hierarchical cluster
analysis was used to classify winter habitats with remotely sensed
environmental variables along each bird’s track. Five habitat
clusters were identified. Birds that spent more time in the Western
Subarctic Gyre and those that wintered further south had elevated
THg concentrations. In contrast to THg, trophic level varied annually
but did not show strong spatial patterns. Our results documented spatial
variability in THg exposure based on the oceanic wintering locations
of red-legged kittiwakes and highlight their use as a bioindicator
of MeHg across ocean basins.