Maternal Steller sea lion diets elevate fetal mercury concentrations in an area of population decline. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Total mercury concentrations ([THg]) measured in western Aleutian Island Steller sea lion pup hair were the highest maximum [THg] documented in this endangered species to date. Some pups exceeded concentrations at which other fish-eating mammals can exhibit adverse neurological and reproductive effects (21% and 15% pups above 20 and 30 g/g in hair, respectively). Of particular concern is fetal exposure to mercury during a particularly vulnerable stage of neurological development in late gestation. Hair and blood [THg] were highly correlated and 20% of pups sampled in the western Aleutian Islands of Alaska exceeded mammalian risk thresholds established for each of these tissues. Higher nitrogen isotope ratios suggested that pups accumulated the highest [THg] when their dams fed on higher trophic level prey during late gestation.

published proceedings

  • Sci Total Environ

altmetric score

  • 16.08

author list (cited authors)

  • Rea, L. D., Castellini, J. M., Correa, L., Fadely, B. S., & O'Hara, T. M.

citation count

  • 54

complete list of authors

  • Rea, Lorrie D||Castellini, J Margaret||Correa, Lucero||Fadely, Brian S||O'Hara, Todd M

publication date

  • January 2013