Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Medieu A., Lorrain Anne, Point David. (2023). Are tunas relevant bioindicators of mercury concentrations in the global ocean ?. Ecotoxicology, [Early access], p. [16 p.]. ISSN 0963-9292.

Titre du document
Are tunas relevant bioindicators of mercury concentrations in the global ocean ?
Année de publication
2023
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:001009160900002
Auteurs
Medieu A., Lorrain Anne, Point David
Source
Ecotoxicology, 2023, [Early access], p. [16 p.] ISSN 0963-9292
Humans are exposed to toxic methylmercury mainly by consuming marine fish. The Minamata Convention aims at reducing anthropogenic mercury releases to protect human and ecosystem health, employing monitoring programs to meet its objectives. Tunas are suspected to be sentinels of mercury exposure in the ocean, though not evidenced yet. Here, we conducted a literature review of mercury concentrations in tropical tunas (bigeye, yellowfin, and skipjack) and albacore, the four most exploited tunas worldwide. Strong spatial patterns of tuna mercury concentrations were shown, mainly explained by fish size, and methylmercury bioavailability in marine food web, suggesting that tunas reflect spatial trends of mercury exposure in their ecosystem. The few mercury long-term trends in tunas were contrasted and sometimes disconnected to estimated regional changes in atmospheric emissions and deposition, highlighting potential confounding effects of legacy mercury, and complex reactions governing the fate of mercury in the ocean. Inter-species differences of tuna mercury concentrations associated with their distinct ecology suggest that tropical tunas and albacore could be used complementarily to assess the vertical and horizontal variability of methylmercury in the ocean. Overall, this review elevates tunas as relevant bioindicators for the Minamata Convention, and calls for large-scale and continuous mercury measurements within the international community. We provide guidelines for tuna sample collection, preparation, analyses and data standardization with recommended transdisciplinary approaches to explore tuna mercury content in parallel with observation abiotic data, and biogeochemical model outputs. Such global and transdisciplinary biomonitoring is essential to explore the complex mechanisms of the marine methylmercury cycle.
Plan de classement
Pollution [038] ; Ressources halieutiques [040] ; Nutrition, alimentation [054]
Description Géographique
MONDE
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010088154]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010088154
Contact