Mystery at Sea
How mercury gets into tuna and other fish in the ocean has scientists searching from the coast to the floor
- By Eric Jaffe
- Smithsonian.com, September 27, 2007, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
Perhaps the biggest question is how much mercury can be converted into methylmercury on the ocean surface. Common wisdom has been that only bacteria living in oxygen-free areas can produce this conversion. However, Mason has done work near the equator in the Pacific Ocean showing that methylation might indeed occur in low-oxygen waters. It remains to be seen whether enough of these regions exist to have a big impact on methylmercury levels in fish.
If it turns out methylmercury can be created near the water surface, emissions regulations might have a direct impact on the amount of mercury in tuna and other fish in the ocean, Mason says. The same holds true if subsequent research supports the idea that methylmercury made in the coastal zone can be transported offshore.
What scientists do know, of course, is that something must account for the mercury found in tuna and other ocean fish. "The reality is that all methylmercury is being probably produced in all three environments"—along coasts, in deep vents and in some ocean surfaces—"but we need more work to parse out this fractionation," Mason says. For now, except in one San Francisco courthouse, the jury is still out.
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Comments (8)
There has not been one case in the history of our country that a baby in the mothers womb, died from overdose on mercury while consuming large amount of fish. These kind of articles actually scare people away from eating fish. They deprive low income families of the cheapest affordable omega threes available through media scare. The lancet study is a strong study that shows mothers who ate canned tuna while pregnant and those who didnt. the Mothers who did eat tuna, there kids had a higher iq and had the least amount of health issues. The mothers who stayed away from eating fish. there babys had unuasualy low IQ and where under developed.
Posted by Sean Tweedy on March 24,2010 | 05:45 PM
The scientists did not even consider where a vast majority of contaminants originate from which is run-off and ocean dumping. The amount of solid waste dumped in the Atlantic ocean from the tri-state area NY, NJ, DE (which is supposed to be dumped 100 miles off-shore near the canyon which it is not meaning shallow water) has not even been examined, gauged or even monitored. Does everyone think that once it is dumped it simply "goes away" and does not remain in the water? The amount of mercury in batteries dumped in the last 50 years is still in the ocean - all you have to do is look for it where it is being dumped. Oh, let's not forget all the radioactive waste dumped of the VA coast in the 1960's...eveyone forgot about that as well. The US has used the ocean as a garbage can and toilet, now they wonder why it is so polluted?
Posted by Mark V on March 24,2010 | 05:07 PM
I thought Mercury was an element...you can't break down an element but only extract it....
Posted by j san on March 24,2010 | 03:49 PM
I was working for a tuna factory for 20 years, on 1972-1991 and all this time as a chemist i analize raw tuna meat and already canned tuna, I remember that tuna over 30lbs have the higher concentration of methylmercury (less than o.10ppm), majority only have traces of mercury.Fish over 100lbs are the highest (over 2.0ppm).Also all depend of the area of origin. Canned tuna is 100% safe for comsumtion.
Posted by Francisco Ramirez on March 1,2010 | 08:27 PM
i am doing a project and i want to know way more about this terrific biome! so please email me about what you guys think i should do and yes you have my email so feel free=)
Posted by zakia on September 23,2009 | 03:19 PM
What mercury compounds to be broken down? I thought mercury, HG was toxic.
Posted by john adams on October 29,2008 | 12:53 AM
maybe if the world knew about the harmful stuff in fish we wuldent eat so much. wich would cause for people to eat less fish and eventually result in a bigger fish population.
Posted by Susan Mccollough on November 27,2007 | 06:20 PM
What genius Judge ruled not to put warnings on cans of tuna showing levels of mercury? Who gives a dang if it's natural or not naturally occurring mercury. You still need to warn 90% of the people who aren't going to take the time to educate themselves. If you put the warning on the cans, you'll educate a whole lot of people really quickly. Hence, the more people you have aware of the problem, the more they will push for regulations that will spawn (pardon the pun) more research money to investigate the problem or to invent a process to remove the mercury from caught fish (wouldn't that be a revelation). Sometimes you professors and law makers are thinking so hard and can't see the school for the fish. I'll close with a quote from the famous Mary Patrick "Lets all work together to do what's right."
Posted by Charles Patrick on November 25,2007 | 10:57 PM