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Abstract
Being a global pollutant, mercury can originate from both natural as well as anthropogenic sources. Coastal marine atmospheric fog is considered a potential source of ocean-derived monomethylmercury (MMHg) to coastal terrestrial ecosystems. However, the ratio between mercury appearing through natural processes and that from the results of human activity is unclear. We assumed that the total mercury content in the fur of tigers would differ depending on the distance from the sea. Here we show that the average mercury content in tigers from the coast (0.435 ± 0.062 mg kg−1) is significantly different from tigers from the inland area (0.239 ± 0.075 mg kg−1), (p = 0.02). We found that the content of mercury in the fur of tigers is largely dependent of natural processes rather than human activity. We assume that the levels of mercury in coastal ecosystems in the south of the Russian Far East reflect the position of the region relative to the deep faults of the East Pacific Platform. Obtained data indicate that environmental risks associated with mercury pollution currently exist, but do not pose a serious threat to Siberian tigers.
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Details
1 Cherepovets State University, Cherepovets, Russia (GRID:grid.446199.7) (ISNI:0000 0000 8543 3323)
2 FSBI United Directorate Lazovsky State Nature Reserve them L. G. Kaplanova, and the National Park “Call of the Tiger”, Lazo, Russia (GRID:grid.446199.7)
3 Institute for Water and Environmental Problems SB RAS, Khabarovsk, Russia (GRID:grid.446199.7)
4 Institute for Biology of Inland Waters RAS, Yaroslavl, Russia (GRID:grid.446199.7)