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Baihua Reservoir is located in Guizhou Province, Southwest China. During 1971 to 1997, this reservoir suffered serious mercury contamination from Guizhou organic chemical plant (GOCP), just like Minamata. But fortunately, neither Minamata disease nor high level methylmercury was found in fish samples although the total mercury concentration in sediment was up to 38.9 ppm in Baihua reservoir. Why? It was a scientific mystery. To solve the mystery, a collaborated project was conducted by professor FENG Xinbin’s group from Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences (IGCAS) and Professor Janusz Dominik’ group from Institute F. -A. Forel, University of Geneva, Switzerland.
In their study, water, sediment, plankton, bentonic organism and fish samples were collected systematically in Baihua reservoir in 2009 and 2010. Mercury species and auxiliary parameters were measured in these samples by using mercury isotope and GC-ICP-MS technology, sediment-surface water analytical system method (SWISS 1.0). By analyzing large amounts of the data, the scientists discovered three clues to the above mystery: low rate of methylation in neutral-alkali waterbody, relatively simple food web structure, and reduced MMHg update by fish due to biodilution effect related to the eutrophic condition of the reservoir.
Citation: “Insights into low fish mercury bioaccumulation in a mercury-contaminated reservoir, Guizhou, China” (ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION, 160 109-117, JAN 2012). The scientists also suggested in the paper that the elimination of plankton should be conducted with remedy of mercury synchronously to avoid high mercury fish level happening in an oligotrophic reservoir.
Read more at Nano Patents and Innovations