Mercury released by permafrost thaw puts Yukon River fish at risk: study
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[September 17, 2020]
By Yereth Rosen
ANCHORAGE (Reuters) - If carbon emissions
continue at current rates, so much mercury will leach from thawing
permafrost that fish in the Yukon River could become dangerous to eat
within a few decades, according to a study published Wednesday in the
journal Nature Communications.
Current emissions rates threaten to trigger enough thaw release to drive
mercury levels in Yukon River fish above federal safety guidelines by
2050, according to the study.
Mercury concentration in the Yukon is expected to double by the end of
the century if carbon emissions continue at present rates, according to
the study.
But if emissions are reduced in line with the 2015 Paris Agreement,
mercury concentrations will increase by only 14% by the end of the
century, keeping levels in fish at or below safety guidelines, according
to the study.
“A lot will depend on what we do in terms of response to climate
change,” said Kevin Schaefer of the Colorado-based National Snow and Ice
Data Center, the study’s lead author.
The study has implications beyond the indigenous communities in Alaska
and Canada that depend on Yukon River fish for their income, diets and
culture, Schaefer said.
The nearly 2,000-mile river is “a bellwether or a canary-in-the-coal
mine kind of thing, an indicator of what might happen over the whole
Arctic,” he said. Thaw-released mercury will work its way from the land
to the river and ultimately, into the oceans, and thaw-released mercury
in gaseous form will encircle the world, he said.
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The Yukon River is seen in Alaska in this undated handout photo
courtesy of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. REUTERS/U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service/Handout via Reuters/File Photo
“What happens in the Yukon is going to affect the entire globe, not
just the people who live on or around the Yukon River,” he said.
A 2018 study co-authored by Schaefer, in collaboration with partners
from the U.S. Geological Survey and other institutions, estimated
that Northern Hemisphere’s permafrost soils hold nearly twice as
much stored mercury as is in all the rest of the world’s soils, the
oceans and the atmosphere combined.
(Reporting by Yereth Rosen; Editing by Bill Tarrant and Christopher
Cushing)
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