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Hydroelectric ‘clean’ energy may be responsible for ‘methylmercury’ threat

Posted on 8 September 2015

With increasing global warming nations are turning to renewable and clean sources of energy including hydroelectric power, but it seems that though this ‘clean’ energy enables us to tackle the carbon menace to a certain extent, there are other threats that emanate from use of such sources that need to be taken care of.

Researchers have found that hydroelectric power plants are responsible for the unusually high concentrations of methylmercury, a potent neurotoxin, in Arctic marine life. The findings are the results of a study carried out by researchers at Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Science (SEAS) and Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

Researchers explain that the high levels of methylmercury in Arctic life are a byproduct of global warming and the melting of sea-ice in Arctic and sub-Arctic regions. They say that though this form of energy is one of the cleanest on Earth, the power plants will put even more methylmercury into ecosystems than climate change.

Elsie Sunder, an associate professor of environmental engineering at SEAS and environmental health at the Harvard Chan School, and her team carried out a field trip of Lake Melville in 2012 and collected baseline methylmercury levels on a fishing boat. The findings were startling as the levels of methylmercury in the water were higher than their modeling could explain. The highest concentrations of methylmercury in the plankton peaked between 1 and 10 meters below the surface. These findings closely matched findings from the central Arctic Ocean. The question was, why was there such a high concentration of methylmercury in biota in both systems?

“All of the methylmercury from the rivers feeding into Lake Melville and from the sediment at the bottom of the lake couldn’t account for the levels in the water. There was something else going on here”, said Amina Schartup, the paper’s first author.

The answer lay in the eating habits of plankton.

Researchers found that when fresh and salt water meet, especially in estuaries or when sea-ice melts in the ocean, the salinity increases as water deepens. This is when organic matter that typically sinks to the bottom to reach a neutral buoyancy — meaning it can’t float up or down in the water column. This layer, called marine snow, collects other small settling debris and concentrates it into a feeding zone for marine plankton. The bacteria stuck in this zone are performing a complex chemical process that turns naturally occurring mercury into deadly and readily accumulated methylmercury.

The zooplankton are attracted to this layer of marine snow and they go on a feeding frenzy that can last several weeks. In this time, methylmercury produced by the bacteria accumulates in biota and magnifies as it works its way up the food chain.

“This system is incredibly efficient at accumulating methylmercury,” said Schartup.

This same system can be extrapolated to the Arctic, where freshwater from melting ice is mixing with salt water, Schartup said.

If this system is already a pro at magnifying methylmercury, what happens when methylmercury levels increase due to reservoir flooding upstream?

Sunderland and her team collected soil cores from the inland areas that are slated to be flooded for hydroelectric power in 2017. The team simulated flooding by covering the cores with river water. Within five days, methylmercury levels in the water covering the cores increased 14 fold. Estimated increases in methylmercury inputs from the Churchill River resulting from this pulse of methylmercury range from 25 to 200 percent.

That’s the low estimate.

“We removed the litter layer and surface vegetation prior to saturating the cores, which is known to decrease methylmercury levels, ” Sunderland said. “Without clearing that, the actual pulse of methlymercury to the Lake Melville ecosystem may be much greater.”

For communities who rely on the ecosystem for food, like those along Lake Melville, the downstream effects of flooding for hydroelectric development could be devastating.

“Scientists have a responsibility to understand and explain how environmental systems will react before they are modified,” Schartup said. “Because once the damage is done, you can’t take it back.”

The study is published in PNAS.

Ravi
Ravi

1 thought on “Hydroelectric ‘clean’ energy may be responsible for ‘methylmercury’ threat”

  1. mememine says:
    8 September 2015 at 21:04

    Science was never as certain as you eager “believers”.
    Science has never said; “proven” for a CO2 Armageddon and not one IPCC warning says; “will be” or “inevitable” or “certain” and the last 34 years of climate action failure and global denial proves liberals exaggerated vague science just as an excuse to blame conservatives.

    Is this how you want your kids remembering you?

    *Occupywallstreet now does not even mention CO2 in its list of demands because of the bank-funded and corporate run carbon trading stock markets ruled by politicians.

    Reply

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