Matthew Dietrich, Michael Dumelle, Amanda M Nahlik, Heather E Golden, Jay R Christensen, Charles R Lane, Eric M Moore, Gabriel M Filippelli
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Wetlands provide many ecosystem services, such as mitigating pollution, attenuating flooding and drought extremes, and providing habitat for many species. However, studies quantifying potential wetland sequestration of heavy metals as an ecosystem service, particularly across large spatial extents, are sparse. We utilized data from the United States Environmental Protection Agency's National Wetland Condition Assessment to estimate anthropogenic metal (Pb, Cu, Cr) storage in the upper 40 cm of wetland soils across the conterminous United States-never done before at this scale. Large amounts of anthropogenic Cu and Cr are stored in wetland soil across the conterminous United States, at 299.5 ± 73.2 (95% confidence interval) and 483.4 ± 132.1 thousand metric tons (MT), respectively. Anthropogenic Pb totaled 394.3 ± 265.2 thousand MT, which, for context, is roughly equivalent to 7% of lead-based gasoline additives used in the U.S. between 1927-1994. Between 15-22% of Cu, Cr, and Pb mass stored within the upper 40 cm of wetland soils across the conterminous United States is estimated to be anthropogenic. We also estimated wetland anthropogenic metal loading to normalize mass by area and compared across different wetland types and features. In most cases, estimated wetland redox state, tidal influence, wetland hydrologic regime, and geographical regions do not substantially impact estimates of anthropogenic metal loading. It is clear, though, that wetlands often contain substantive anthropogenic metals and that monitoring of hydrologic and/or geochemical changes in wetlands is important to discern whether any metals may mobilize and pose a hazard to ecosystems or human health.
期刊介绍:
Wetlands is an international journal concerned with all aspects of wetlands biology, ecology, hydrology, water chemistry, soil and sediment characteristics, management, and laws and regulations. The journal is published 6 times per year, with the goal of centralizing the publication of pioneering wetlands work that has otherwise been spread among a myriad of journals. Since wetlands research usually requires an interdisciplinary approach, the journal in not limited to specific disciplines but seeks manuscripts reporting research results from all relevant disciplines. Manuscripts focusing on management topics and regulatory considerations relevant to wetlands are also suitable. Submissions may be in the form of articles or short notes. Timely review articles will also be considered, but the subject and content should be discussed with the Editor-in-Chief (NDSU.wetlands.editor@ndsu.edu) prior to submission. All papers published in Wetlands are reviewed by two qualified peers, an Associate Editor, and the Editor-in-Chief prior to acceptance and publication. All papers must present new information, must be factual and original, and must not have been published elsewhere.