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Heavy metals in sediments and uptake by burrowing mayflies in western Lake Erie basin
Authors:Sarah E Opfer  John R Farver  Jeffrey G Miner
Affiliation:
  • a Department of Biological Sciences, Aquatic Ecology and Fisheries Laboratory, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH 43403, USA
  • b Department of Geology, School of Earth, Environment, and Society, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH 43403, USA
  • c Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, and National Center for Water Quality Research, Heidelberg University, Tiffin, OH 44883, USA
  • Abstract:During the past two decades, burrowing Hexagenia mayflies have returned to the western basin of Lake Erie. Because of their importance as a prey resource for higher trophic levels and their extensive residence time in potentially contaminated sediment, Hexagenia may be a source of heavy metal transfer. To better understand the distribution and transfer of heavy metals in sediment and mayflies, sediment and mayfly nymphs were collected from 24 locations across the western basin of Lake Erie in May 2007. Following USEPA protocols, samples were analyzed for 16 elements using ICP-OES or ICP-MS. Metal concentrations in the sediments exceeded the Threshold Effect Level for at least one metal at all sample sites. Sediment heavy metal distribution profiles indicate metal concentrations are correlated with organic matter content, and the highest heavy metal concentrations were found in the central deeper region of the western basin where organic content in the sediments was greatest. Hexagenia were distributed throughout the western basin, with greatest density (1350/m2) within the Detroit River plume. The Cd and Zn levels in mayflies were on average approximately 4 and 2 times greater, respectively, than sediment levels, and the Cd concentrations in the sediments exceeded the Threshold Effect Level at 27 of 28 sites and exceeded the Probable Effect Level at 9 of 28 sites. Spatial representation of heavy metal concentrations in mayflies exhibited a similar pattern to the spatial distribution of heavy metals and organic matter in the sediments with higher concentrations of metals found in mayflies residing in the central deeper region of the western basin.
    Keywords:Lake Erie  Heavy metals  Sediment  Hexagenia  Bioaccumulation
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