Distribution of mercury species across a zonal section of the eastern tropical South Pacific Ocean (U.S. GEOTRACES GP16)

2016 
Abstract Monomethylmercury is a neurotoxin formed in the ocean that accumulates in fish. To better understand the chemical cycling of mercury (Hg) in the ocean, multiple Hg species were measured during the 2013 U.S. GEOTRACES section in the eastern tropical South Pacific Ocean (GP16) from Peru to Tahiti. Total Hg (HgT), elemental Hg (Hg 0 ), monomethyl-Hg (MMHg), and dimethyl-Hg (DMHg) were measured in high resolution across the section, which included productive surface waters in the Peru upwelling region, a suboxic oxygen minimum zone (OMZ), and an expansive hydrothermal vent plume from the East Pacific Rise (EPR). Filtered HgT accumulated in upwelled waters near the coast of Peru where oxygen concentrations were the lowest, and MMHg represented 10–20% of the total Hg upwelling flux. The buoyant hydrothermal plume was not enriched with Hg; however, water below 2500 m had anomalously high concentrations of filtered HgT beneath the plume and in warmer bottom waters in the eastern part of the section. Elemental Hg averaged
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