Description
The formation and transport of methylmercury (MeHg), a neurotoxin, in aquatic environments is a global concern for human health as MeHg can bioaccumulate and biomagnify to high concentrations in aquatic food webs. MeHg is formed by conversion from inorganic mercury through microbial mediated methylation. Sulfate-reducing bacteria have been identified as the primary organisms responsible for MeHg production. Pure-culture studies suggest that low availability of cobalt and copper may inhibit mercury methylation, but whether such limitations occur in the environment is unclear. To explore the possible interaction between trace metal availability and mercury methylation, sediments from the East Fork Poplar Creek in Oak Ridge, Tennessee were sampled and then incubated in the presence and absence of added dissolved cobalt and copper. Three types of data are provided in this package. The first reports the uptake of dissolved cobalt and copper by these stream sediments on short time scales (24 hours) in the form of final dissolved and adsorbed concentrations. The second data component consists of a time series of dissolved concentrations and pH values for stream sediments incubated with artificial stream water containing different addition levels of dissolved cobalt or copper. The dissolved concentrations reported include total iron, manganese, sulfur, phosphorus, nickel, zinc and cobalt, dissolved concentrations of sulfate and orthophosphate, and the amount of cobalt or copper adsorbed by the sediment. The third data component reports data at 0 and 72 hours of incubation time for stream sediments to which cobalt was added. These data include concentrations of methylmercury with isotope labeling to enable determination of methylation and demethylation rates as well as dissolved concentrations of sulfate, phosphate, chloride, iron, cobalt, and organic carbon. All data are provided in text-based CSV format with header sections indicating the data contained in each file and the corresponding units. Note that "u" is used in place of Greek lower-case mu to indicate the micro prefix on units. A Table of Contents file (Data_package_TableofContents.txt) provides an index for the data contained in the individual files.