• Dragonflies reveal mercury pollution lev

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Wed Jul 22 21:30:24 2020
    Dragonflies reveal mercury pollution levels across US national parks
    Local research project spurs first nationwide survey of the toxic metal


    Date:
    July 22, 2020
    Source:
    Dartmouth College
    Summary:
    Research confirms dragonfly larvae as ''biosentinels'' to indicate
    mercury pollution and presents the first-ever survey of mercury
    pollution in the U.S. National Park System.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    A citizen science program that began over a decade ago has confirmed the
    use of dragonflies to measure mercury pollution, according to a study
    in Environmental Science & Technology.


    ==========================================================================
    The national research effort, which grew from a regional project to
    collect dragonfly larvae, found that the young form of the insect predator
    can be used as a "biosentinel" to indicate the amount of mercury that
    is present in fish, amphibians and birds.

    The finding will make it easier to conduct mercury research and could
    lead to a national registry of pollution data on the toxic metal.

    "Researchers needed a proxy for fish since that is what people and animals eat," said Celia Chen, director of Dartmouth's Toxic Metals Superfund
    Research Program and a co-author of the study. "Fish can be hard to work
    with for a national-level research program, so it's helpful to be able
    to focus our research on dragonfly larvae." Dragonflies occupy diverse freshwater habitats across six continents and have tissues that take up
    mercury in its toxic form. As predators, dragonflies operate in the food
    web in a manner that is similar to fish, birds and amphibians that also accumulate mercury in their body tissues.

    The study includes data from thousands of larval dragonfly specimens
    collected from nearly 500 locations across 100 sites within the
    U.S. National Park System. The survey was collected from 2009 through
    2018 as part of the national Dragonfly Mercury Project.



    ==========================================================================
    "The support of citizen scientists around the country created the
    opportunity for this study to have such significance. This is a terrific example of how public outreach around science can bring results that
    help the entire country," said Chen.

    Methylmercury, the organic form of the toxic metal mercury, poses
    risks to humans and wildlife through the consumption of fish. Mercury
    pollution comes from power plants, mining and other industrial sites. It
    is transported in the atmosphere and then deposited in the natural
    environment, where wildlife can be exposed to it.

    Fish and aquatic birds are commonly used to monitor mercury levels but are difficult to work with in a large-scale project because of their size, migratory patterns, and the diversity of species. Dragonfly larvae are
    easy to collect and make the citizen science research project possible.

    "It is extremely rewarding to assist teachers and their students to engage
    in data-driven, real-world research impacting their communities. I see a
    lot of enthusiasm from students eager to take part in 'real' science,"
    said Kate Buckman, a research scientist who serves as Dartmouth's
    coordinator for the citizen science program.

    As part of the decade-long study, researchers came up with the first-ever survey of mercury pollution in the U.S. National Park System. The research found that about two-thirds of the aquatic sites studied within the
    national parks are polluted with moderate-to-extreme levels of mercury.



    ==========================================================================
    The finding of mercury within park sites is not an indicator that the
    source of pollution is in the parks themselves. Mercury is distributed
    widely within the atmosphere and is deposited in the protected areas as
    it is in other water bodies across the country.

    Given that the parks studied stretch across the entire U.S., including
    Alaska and Hawaii, the findings reflect levels of mercury throughout
    the country.

    "To date, we have not conducted such a broad scale survey on mercury in
    the U.S. The beauty of the dragonfly data set is that it is national,
    covers a huge area with different systems, and has the potential to
    create a national baseline of mercury pollution information," said Chen.

    The study also found that faster moving bodies of water, such as rivers
    and streams, featured more mercury pollution than slower moving systems including lakes, ponds, and wetlands.

    According to the paper: "Collectively, this continental-scale study demonstrates the utility of dragonfly larvae for estimating the
    potential mercury risk to fish and wildlife in aquatic ecosystems
    and provides a framework for engaging citizen science as a component
    of landscape [mercury] monitoring programs." In the citizen science
    project, students and park visitors conduct field studies and collect
    the dragonfly specimens. National Park rangers help guide the citizen scientists through the protected sites.

    The original project was launched by Dr. Sarah Nelson at the University
    of Maine and the Schoodic Institute in 2007. Dartmouth's Toxic Metals
    Superfund Research Program developed a regional effort in New Hampshire
    and Vermont in 2010. The project was expanded nationally by the National
    Park Service and the U.S. Geological Survey.

    The citizen science project in the Upper Valley region of New England
    typically runs in the fall with participation from high school students
    in New Hampshire and Vermont.

    Researchers from the USGS, National Park Service, University of Maine, Appalachian Mountain Club and Dartmouth participated in this study. Collin Eagles-Smith from the USGS served as the paper's lead author. Sarah
    Nelson who launched the original project is now director of research at
    the Appalachian Mountain Club.


    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Dartmouth_College. Note: Content
    may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Collin A. Eagles-Smith, James J. Willacker, Sarah J. Nelson,
    Colleen M.

    Flanagan Pritz, David P. Krabbenhoft, Celia Y. Chen, Joshua
    T. Ackerman, Evan H. Campbell Grant, David S. Pilliod. A
    National-Scale Assessment of Mercury Bioaccumulation in United
    States National Parks Using Dragonfly Larvae As Biosentinels through
    a Citizen-Science Framework. Environmental Science & Technology,
    2020; 54 (14): 8779 DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.0c01255 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/07/200722083811.htm

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