Toxic mercury lurking in Great Salt Lake
"Poisonous
buildup:
Federal
scientists
say
the
levels
are
"some
of
the
highest
ever
found";
there
are
no
reports
of
the
toxin
reaching
humans"
Full
Article
Last
Updated: 10/24/2005
03:45:56
PM
MDT
Federal
scientists
studying
the
Great
Salt
Lake
have
found
alarmingly
high
levels
of
mercury
in
the
water
and
in a
bird
that
feeds
on
the
lake's
brine
shrimp,
prompting
a
reassessment
of
earlier
assumptions
about
the
inland
sea's
ability
to
cleanse
itself.
The
U.S.
Geological
Survey
and
Fish
and
Wildlife
Service
researchers
conducted
"reconnaissance-phase"
studies
of
the
lake
during
three
years
since
the
mid-1990s.
They
originally
were
gathering
information
on
selenium
in
the
lake,
but
decided
also
to
test
the
samples
for
mercury.
"We
thought
we
would
find
some
high
levels
of
methylmercury,"
said
David
Naftz,
the
USGS
research
hydrologist
who
is
heading
the
Great
Salt
Lake
project,
"but
not
some
of
the
highest
[the
USGS]
has
ever
found."
Concentrations
of
methylmercury
-
the
element's
organic
and
most
poisonous
form
-
exceeded
25
nanograms
per
liter
of
Great
Salt
Lake
water.
Fish
consumption
warnings
in
the
Florida
Everglades
were
posted
when
water
there
was
found
to
have
1
nanogram
per
liter.
There
are
no
fish
in
the
Great
Salt
Lake,
and
no
evidence
yet
that
mercury
from
the
lake
is
getting
into
the
human
food
chain.
But
the
brine
shrimp
the
project
scientists
have
studied
show
evidence
of
mercury
"bioaccumulation,"
that
is,
a
buildup
of
the
toxin,
in
levels
harmful
to
the
lake's
migratory
birds.
The
bird
they
studied
is
the
eared
grebe,
which
eats
brine
shrimp
from
May
to
December.
The
researchers
found
mercury
levels
in
the
birds'
livers
more
than
doubled
during
their
months
on
the
lake.
The
study's
preliminary
findings
eventually
may
overturn
the
long-held
idea
that
areas
of
the
lake's
deep
brine
layer,
which
has
no
oxygen,
is a
kind
of
disposal
system
where
toxins
sink
to
the
lake
bed
and
become
inert.
Instead,
the
USGS
study
suggests
the
lake's
peculiar
chemistry
actually
speeds
the
conversion
of
mercury
to
its
more
toxic
organic
form.
"It's
not
a
disposal,
it's
a
factory,"
Naftz
said.
Mercury
is a
highly
toxic
element
that
occurs
naturally
in
the
environment
but
also
has
been
introduced
through
human
activity.
Utah's
industrial
and
mining
past
has
exposed
the
lake
to
mercury
pollution.
Coal-burning
power
plants,
however,
are
the
largest
human-caused
source
of
mercury
pollution
in
the
world
and
continue
to
spread
mercury
through
the
atmosphere.
Mercury
collects
in
water,
plants
and
animals.
The
National
Research
Council,
which
is
part
of
the
National
Academies
of
Science,
has
determined
that
the
population
at
highest
risk
from
methylmercury
exposure
are
the
children
of
women
who
eat
lots
of
fish
and
seafood.
The
research
council
estimated
more
than
60,000
children
each
year
are
at
risk
for
neurological
problems
due
to
in
utero
exposure
to
methylmercury.
Though
the
USGS
studies
have
not
found
any
evidence
that
mercury
in
the
Great
Salt
Lake
has
entered
the
human
food
chain,
ducks
and
geese
that
feed
in
the
lake's
wetlands
could
be
subject
to
the
same
bioaccumulation
found
in
the
eared
grebes,
said
Fish
and
Wildlife
researcher
Bruce
Waddell.
People
who
eat
the
waterfowl
might
be
exposed
to
mercury,
agreed
Steven
Schwarzbach,
a
research
manager
for
the
USGS
at
the
Western
Ecological
Research
Center
in
Sacramento,
Calif.
The
Great
Salt
Lake
study
hasn't
yet
tested
that
possibility,
however.
"There
are
some
mysteries
out
here
that
are
just
starting
to
be
discovered,
so
it's
not
fair
to
make
an
assessment
of
what's
happening,"
said
Waddell,
who
is
collaborating
with
Naftz
and
Madison,
Wis.-based
USGS
scientist
David
Krabbenhoft.
Here's
what
they
have
found
so
far:
l
All
the
water
samples
collected
exceeded
mercury
standards
for
protection
of
aquatic
life
in
marine
environments.
l
The
median
mercury
concentrations
in
brine
shrimp
increased
seasonally.
l
Mercury
concentrations
in
eared
grebes'
livers
more
than
doubled
from
August
through
December,
when
the
birds
molt
and
their
primary
food
source
is
brine
shrimp.
During
May,
the
median
concentration
of
mercury
in
the
birds'
livers
was
1
part
per
million.
By
December,
the
concentrations
rose
to
about
18
ppm.
Mercury
is a
difficult
element
to
measure
and
is
toxic
in
very
small
amounts.
For
example,
Naftz
said,
most
heavy
metals
are
toxic
between
1
and
10
parts
per
billion.
Selenium
is
toxic
at 2
ppb.
But
mercury
is
toxic
at
concentrations
measured
in
the
parts
per
trillion.
That
causes
problems
for
data
collectors,
who
often
wear
special
clothing
and
must
observe
strict
protocols.
Naftz
said
that
researchers
who
have
silver
amalgam
fillings
in
their
teeth
or
who
smoke
can
foul
their
collection
samples
merely
by
breathing
on
them.
Naftz
emphasized
that
the
data
collected
so
far
are
preliminary.
"I
don't
want
to
sound
alarms,"
he
said.
What
they've
turned
up
"definitely
concerns
us.
But
it
also
warrants
more
data
collection."
Environmentalists
have
questioned
whether
brine
shrimp
tainted
by
Great
Salt
Lake
mercury
could
be
getting
into
the
human
food
chain
via
farm-raised
fish
and
shellfish.
Naftz
and
Waddell
said
their
preliminary
analyses
don't
show
any
evidence
that
could
be
happening.
Aquaculture
companies
raise
the
brine
shrimp
themselves,
not
in
the
lake,
from
freeze-dried
eggs
known
as
cysts.
Tests
of
the
cysts
failed
to
detect
any
mercury,
Waddell
said,
but
that
could
be
due
to
the
limitations
of
the
detection
equipment.
Environmentalists
also
questioned
whether
humans
could
be
exposed
to
mercury
by
eating
salt
or
other
minerals
extracted
from
the
lake
that
are
sold
as
nutritional
supplements.
That's
unlikely,
said
James
Rytuba,
USGS
mercury
commodity
specialist
based
in
Menlo
Park,
Calif.,
because
the
chemical
compounds
of
the
minerals
can't
accommodate
mercury
molecules.
The
extraction
processes
would
leave
any
mercury
behind,
he
said.
USGS
studies
elsewhere
have
shown
mercury
is
affecting
diving
ducks
in
California,
herons
and
egrets
in
Nevada
and
loons
in
the
Northeast.
The
studies
also
have
shown
methylmercury
can
be
more
harmful
to
bird
embryos
when
selenium
is
also
in
the
diet.
Selenium,
a
trace
element
essential
to
human
health,
can
be
nontoxic.
However,
many
of
its
compounds,
particularly
those
associated
with
copper
mining,
are
extremely
toxic
and
also
bioaccumulate
in
animal
tissues.
The
state
Department
of
Environmental
Quality
is
working
to
establish
selenium
standards
for
the
Great
Salt
Lake
as
part
of a
groundwater
cleanup
settlement
with
Kennecott
Copper.
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