Title of article :
An assessment of anthropogenic source impacts on mercury cycling
in the Willamette Basin, Oregon, USA
Abstract :
In Oregon’s Willamette River Basin (Basin), methylmercury levels in fish triggered health advisories and required
development of a mercury Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) for the Willamette River. A seasonally-responsive dynamic
systems model is used to identify the principal sources of natural and anthropogenic mercury, the relative contributions of these
sources to the river, the impact of hypothetical reductions in specific natural and anthropogenic sources on mercury levels in
surface water, sediment, and fish tissue, and the degree to which any such changes would be clearly discernible to
environmental managers and Basin stakeholders. Two scenarios are modeled: bPRESQ, which considered all currently
known natural and anthropogenic mercury sources and bLEEMQ, which (hypothetically) eliminated all local, but not global,
anthropogenic sources and greatly lowered native soil erosion rates. Elimination of local air emissions reduces runoff of airdeposited
mercury by c34% and advection from the Basin by c12%, while lowering erosion rates reduces particulate runoff
by c57%, deposition from the water column to surficial sediment by c33%, and fluvial load by c24%; for a net reduction of
25.6% in the total mercury load to the river. Such hypothetical reductions bring methylmercury concentrations in predatory fish
to levels that would allow restoration of fish consumption as a beneficial use. However, several factors, primarily technical
feasibility and global sources, may impede attempts to attain this beneficial use. Actualizing the hypothetical 100% elimination
of local anthropogenic sources and a N50% reduction in erosion could pose significant technical challenges. Because local
anthropogenic emissions make relatively smaller contributions to the Basin than do persistent global sources (sources over
which there is little, if any, possibility of local control), localized environmental management actions alone may not be adequate
to address mercury impacts within the Basin.
Keywords :
TMDL , mass balance , Fish consumption , methylmercury , Willamette river