Mercury Risks to Wildlife in California Lakes: Statewide Survey Finds Fish-Eating Birds at Risk in Many Lakes
U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) | May 22nd, 2015
Numerous water bodies in California are listed under the Clean Water Act as being impaired by mercury contamination. Mercury generally poses risks both to humans who consume fish from these water bodies and to wildlife species at the top of the aquatic food chain. The SWAMP has recently completed statewide surveys of contaminants in sport fish from California lakes, rivers, and coastal waters. These surveys generated information regarding potential human exposure to mercury, but did not include monitoring to assess risks to wildlife.
This study was performed to address critical information gaps related to mercury risks to wildlife in California lakes. Western grebes and Clark’s grebes were chosen as the wildlife indicator species. These grebe species are widely distributed and breed in lakes throughout California, are piscivorous (fish-eaters) near the top of the lake food chain, and become flightless after they arrive at their summer locations. This makes them excellent indicators of lake-specific contaminant exposure. Mercury concentrations were measured in grebe blood at all of the lakes, and in grebe eggs where they could be collected. Mercury also was measured in the small fish species that grebes eat and in sport fish in order to determine whether correlations between fish and grebes could be used to estimate risk to grebes in cases where direct measurements of mercury in grebes are not available. Grebes, prey fish, and sport fish were sampled at 25 lakes throughout California (Figure 1) during the spring and summer of 2012 and 2013, seasons when breeding occurs and birds are vulnerable to mercury – induced impairment of reproduction. Mercury concentrations were measured in blood from 354 grebes at 25 lakes, 101 grebe eggs at 7 lakes, 505 prey fish from14 species at 25 lakes, and 230 sport fish from 5 species at 24 lakes. T he lakes included in the survey were selected to be a representative sampling spanning the entire state, a range of mercury contamination, and a variety of sizes, shapes, and elevations.
Keywords
ecosystem management, mercury, pollutants, Surface Water Ambient Monitoring Program (SWAMP), water quality