Mercury levels in coral reefs along the Caribbean coast of Central America
- PMID: 12523547
- DOI: 10.1016/s0025-326x(02)00318-1
Mercury levels in coral reefs along the Caribbean coast of Central America
Abstract
Sediment and coral skeleton samples from 23 coral reefs along the Caribbean coast of Costa Rica and Panama (1497 km) were evaluated for total mercury (Hg). High levels of pollution were found in the entire region with averages of 18.9 and 71.3 ppb in coral skeletons and sediments respectively. Significantly higher contamination was found in Panamanian corals (21.4 ppb) while compared to Costa Rican reef sediments (85.9 ppb). Hg from several processes and non-point sources (e.g., erosion, runoff, flooding, mining, overuse of agrochemicals, industrial waste, ports, and refineries) may have affected the entire region. The widespread observed distribution suggests that Hg is being carried along long distances within the region due to its high concentrations found in "pristine" reefs. Forest burning and colonial mining residues may be considered as possible contamination factors.
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