Can remotely sensed catchment to lake area ratios predict mercury levels in subarctic fishes?
Section 1: Publication
Publication Type
Journal Article
Authorship
Aqdam Mehdi M., Baltzer Jennifer L., Branfireun Brian A., Low George, Low Mike, Swanson Heidi K.
Title
Can remotely sensed catchment to lake area ratios predict mercury levels in subarctic fishes?
Year
2024
Publication Outlet
Environmental Research, Volume 260, 2024, 119545, ISSN 0013-9351
DOI
ISBN
ISSN
Citation
Aqdam Mehdi M., Baltzer Jennifer L., Branfireun Brian A., Low George, Low Mike, Swanson Heidi K. (2024) Can remotely sensed catchment to lake area ratios predict mercury levels in subarctic fishes?, Environmental Research, Volume 260, 2024, 119545, ISSN 0013-9351
Abstract
Mercury concentrations ([Hg]) in fish reflect a complex array of interacting biogeochemical and ecological variables. In northern regions where fish are a critical subsistence food, understanding and predicting fish [Hg] can be particularly difficult, largely due to a paucity of comprehensive data associated with the logistical challenges of field sampling. Building on previous work where we elucidated causal relationships between fish [Hg] and a variety of catchment, water quality, and ecological variables in subarctic lakes, we investigated whether using only ratios of catchment area to lake area (CA:LA) can predict [Hg] in northern freshwater fish species. As CA:LA can be sensed remotely, they may be more feasible and practical to obtain than field data in far northern regions. Our study included thirteen remote lakes that represent a CA:LA gradient of 6.2–423.5 within an ?66,000 km2 subarctic region of Northwest Territories, Canada. We found that size-standardized [Hg] in three widespread fish species, including Lake Whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis), Walleye (Sander vitreus), and Northern Pike (Esox lucius), were significantly and positively related to CA:LA (p < 0.007, r2 = 67–80%), indicating higher fish [Hg] in smaller lakes surrounded by relatively larger catchments. Our findings provide compelling evidence that remotely sensed CA:LA can be used to predict [Hg] in northern fishes and aid in prioritizing understudied and subsistence fishing lakes of the Canadian subarctic for [Hg] monitoring programs.
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