Effects of dissolved organic carbon and salinity on bioavailability of mercury

被引:287
作者
Barkay, T
Gillman, M
Turner, RR
机构
[1] US EPA,NATL HLTH & ENVIRONM EFFECTS LAB,GULF ECOL DIV,GULF BREEZE,FL 32561
[2] UNIV W FLORIDA,CTR ENVIRONM DIAGNOST & BIOREMEDIAT,PENSACOLA,FL 32514
关键词
D O I
10.1128/AEM.63.11.4267-4271.1997
中图分类号
Q81 [生物工程学(生物技术)]; Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 0836 ; 090102 ; 100705 ;
摘要
Hypotheses that dissolved organic carbon (DOG) and electrochemical charge affect the rate of methylmercury [CH3Hg(I)] synthesis by modulating the availability of ionic mercury [Hg(II)] to bacteria were tested by using a mer-lux bioindicator (O. Selifonova, R, Burlage, and T, Barkay, Appl, Environ, Microbiol, 59:3083-3090, 1993), A decline in Hg(II)-dependent light production was observed in the presence of increasing concentrations of DOG, and this decline was more pronounced at pH 7 than at pH 5, suggesting that DOC is a factor controlling the bioavailability of Hg(LI). A thermodynamic model (MINTEQA2) was used to select assay conditions that clearly distinguished among various Hg(II) species, By using this approach, it was shown that negatively charged forms of mercuric chloride (HgCl3-/HgCl42-) induced less light production than the electrochemically neutral form (HgCl2), and no difference was observed between the two neutral forms, HgCl2 and Hg(OH)(2), These results suggest that the negative charge of Hg(II) species reduces their availability to bacteria and may be one reason why accumulation of CH3Hg(I) is more often reported to occur in freshwater than in estuarine and marine biota.
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页码:4267 / 4271
页数:5
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