PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Amphibians have one more thing to worry about—mercury—large USGS study shows

2023-10-30
(Press-News.org) RESTON, Va. — The first widescale assessment of methylmercury in adult amphibians in the U.S. to date shows that, in amphibians, this toxic compound is common, widespread and, at least for some, can reach very high levels.

The study, “Broad-scale Assessment of Methylmercury in Adult Amphibians,” which published today in the journal Environmental Science and Technology, brought together scientists from around the country to test more than 3,200 amphibians representing 14 species from 26 populations.

“Amphibians are the most endangered group of vertebrates worldwide, but until this study, we knew relatively little about the variability of mercury bioaccumulation in amphibians” said Anne Kinsinger, USGS Associate Director for Ecosystems. “Trailblazing USGS science, like this study, provides a solid foundation for research and helps managers address the most pressing issues facing fish and wildlife conservation.”

The amount of methylmercury in amphibians varied by site and by life history characteristics—such as diet, size and sex. Amphibian methylmercury concentrations in this study ranged from barely detectible at some locations, to levels well above wildlife health benchmarks in others.

Although the variation in concentrations between amphibians was large, with the highest measurement 33 times more than the lowest, it was much less than the variation reported for other animals like dragonflies, fishes and birds. The authors suggested the lower variation among amphibians was possibly because they collected samples mainly from wetlands whereas the studies on the other animal types collected samples from a larger diversity of habitats.

Contaminants, such as mercury—a contaminant of global concern because it is harmful to humans and other animals—are suspected to be one reason amphibians are declining, though scientists haven’t teased out mercury’s role, if any, in their decline.

Often formed by microbes living in water, methylmercury is the most bioavailable form of mercury that is highly toxic to vertebrates. It enters the food web and is hard for animals to get rid of once internal, so it accumulates in animals as they continue to feed, a process scientists call bioaccumulation.

“Despite its toxicity, scientists only have a limited understanding of methylmercury’s effects on amphibians,” said Brian Tornabene, USGS Post-doctoral Researcher and the study’s first author. “The results from this study can be used to inform future research on the health effects of methylmercury exposure on amphibians, which for some was very high.”

Study author and lead for the USGS Amphibian Research and Monitoring Initiative, Michael Adams, noted that this study also provides new methods and baseline data that can help scientists and managers assess the risk from mercury for species of management concern, including species listed as threatened and endangered under the Endangered Species Act.

The study even found a way to understand mercury bioaccumulation for amphibians that can’t be sampled—by using dragonfly larvae. Scientists determined that the concentration found in these insects are a good stand-in for estimating the amount of methylmercury bioaccumulation in amphibians, and there is already a nationwide USGS/National Park Service project underway sampling them.

A recent report by the IUCN showed that habitat loss was the greatest threat to amphibians, but their reliance on aquatic habitats also makes them susceptible to environmental contaminants like mercury. Scientists are only just starting to understand how exposure to contaminants contributes to amphibian population dynamics or how contaminants might interact with other threats, like disease. Part of understanding how exposure contributes to decline is determining how exposure varies, and this study provides the most complete picture to date of variation in methylmercury in amphibians.

Read the journal article for more details.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Most websites do not publish privacy policies, researchers say

2023-10-30
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Online privacy policies may not only be difficult to find but nonexistent, according to Penn State researchers who crawled millions of websites and found that only one-third of online organizations made their privacy policy available for review. “Privacy Lost and Found: An Investigation at Scale of Web Privacy Policy Availability,” a paper authored by students and faculty from the Penn State College of Information Sciences and Technology (IST), detailed an analysis of the online privacy policy landscape and studied the unavailability of privacy policies on company domains. It received the Best Student Paper ...

A microscope that can monitor the development of the heart

A microscope that can monitor the development of the heart
2023-10-30
The ability to dynamically track the movement of cells is essential for modeling cellular interactions as they form organs such as the heart. But current microscope technology isn’t up to the task of capturing those movements. Juhyun Lee, associate professor in the Bioengineering Department at The University of Texas at Arlington, recently received a five-year, $1.94 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to develop a 4D high-resolution imaging system to quantify cell tracking. Traditional microscopes allow users to zoom in to view an individual cell. However, doing so obscures that cell’s relationship ...

A Google Slides extension can make presentation software more accessible for blind users

A Google Slides extension can make presentation software more accessible for blind users
2023-10-30
Screen readers, which convert digital text to audio, can make computers more accessible to many disabled users — including those who are blind, low vision or dyslexic. Yet slideshow software, such as Microsoft PowerPoint and Google Slides, isn’t designed to make screen reader output coherent. Such programs typically rely on Z-order — which follows the way objects are layered on a slide — when a screen reader navigates through the contents. Since the Z-order doesn’t adequately convey how a slide is laid out in two-dimensional space, slideshow software can be inaccessible to people with disabilities. A team led by researchers ...

Prisons vulnerable to natural disasters, but ill-prepared

2023-10-30
Three-quarters of Colorado prisons are likely to experience a natural disaster in the coming years, but due to aging infrastructure and outdated policies, many are ill-equipped to keep residents safe, suggests new CU Boulder research. The study, published in the journal Natural Hazards Review, comes on the heels of one of the hottest summers on record and as U.S. lawmakers are calling for an investigation into a rash of what are believed to be heat-related deaths in the nation’s prisons. In other research, including interviews and focus groups with 35 formerly incarcerated Coloradans, the researchers found that most had already suffered from climate-related hazards, experiencing ...

Virtual cognitively enhanced tai chi program improves cognition and executive function in older adults with mild cognitive impairment

2023-10-30
Embargoed for release until 5:00 p.m. ET on Monday 30 October 2023 Annals of Internal Medicine Tip Sheet @Annalsofim Below please find summaries of new articles that will be published in the next issue of Annals of Internal Medicine. The summaries are not intended to substitute for the full articles as a source of information. This information is under strict embargo and by taking it into possession, media representatives are committing to the terms of the embargo not only on their own behalf, but also ...

Research Brief: Study uncovers hundred-year lifespans for three freshwater fish species in the Arizona desert

Research Brief: Study uncovers hundred-year lifespans for three freshwater fish species in the Arizona desert
2023-10-30
A recent study found some of the oldest animals in the world living in a place you wouldn’t expect: fishes in the Arizona desert. Researchers found the second genus of animal ever for which three or more species have known lifespans greater than 100 years, which could open the doors to aging studies across disciplines, such as gerontology and senescence (aging) among vertebrates.  The study centers around a series of fish species within the Ictiobus genus, known as buffalofishes. Minnesota has native populations of each of the three species studied: bigmouth buffalo, smallmouth buffalo and black buffalo. The importance of this research is underscored ...

UMaine, UVM researchers conduct first-ever study of cultural adaptation to climate change

2023-10-30
As the impacts of climate change grow, society and people struggle to adapt to the challenges of the new reality. Change, however, is difficult, and adapting to new ways of life or new ways of doing business often requires a change in culture.  To determine how culture and society adapt to a changing climate, a team of researchers from the University of Maine and the University of Vermont (UVM) have conducted the first-ever study of cultural adaptation to climate change. Using the science of cultural evolution to examine data on which crops farmers plant across the U.S., their work can help inspire more effective policy solutions to survive in ...

New frequency comb can identify molecules in 20-nanosecond snapshots

2023-10-30
From monitoring concentrations of greenhouse gases to detecting COVID in the breath, laser systems known as frequency combs can identify specific molecules as simple as carbon dioxide and as complex as monoclonal antibodies with unprecedented accuracy and sensitivity. Amazing as they are, however, frequency combs have been limited in how fast they can capture a high-speed process such as hypersonic propulsion or the folding of proteins into their final three-dimensional shapes. Now, researchers at the National Institute of Standards ...

Hospital care for children has shifted from general hospitals to children’s hospitals over last 20 years

Hospital care for children has shifted from general hospitals to children’s hospitals over last 20 years
2023-10-30
CHAPEL HILL, NC – Historically, most children in the United States who needed to be hospitalized were treated at general hospitals that treat both children and adults. But the number of hospitals providing inpatient care for children has decreased over the last decade, and many of them struggled to keep up with the demand for children’s care during a viral infection surge in the fall of 2022. Now children are much more likely to be treated at children’s hospitals that are concentrated into fewer locations, according to a new study led by UNC School of Medicine researchers. “The ...

The brain may learn about the world the same way some computational models do

2023-10-30
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- To make our way through the world, our brain must develop an intuitive understanding of the physical world around us, which we then use to interpret sensory information coming into the brain. How does the brain develop that intuitive understanding? Many scientists believe that it may use a process similar to what’s known as “self-supervised learning.” This type of machine learning, originally developed as a way to create more efficient models for computer vision, allows computational models to learn about visual scenes based solely on the similarities and differences between them, with no ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Unexpected human behaviour revealed in prisoner's dilemma study: Choosing cooperation even after defection

Distant relatedness in biobanks harnessed to identify undiagnosed genetic disease

UCLA at ASTRO: Predicting response to chemoradiotherapy in rectal cancer, 2-year outcomes of MRI-guided radiotherapy for prostate cancer, impact of symptom self-reporting during chemoradiation and mor

Estimated long-term benefits of finerenone in heart failure

MD Anderson launches first-ever academic journal: Advances in Cancer Education & Quality Improvement

Penn Medicine at the 2024 ASTRO Annual Meeting

Head and neck, meningioma research highlights of University of Cincinnati ASTRO abstracts

Center for BrainHealth receives $2 million match gift from Adm. William McRaven (ret.), recipient of Courage & Civility Award

Circadian disruption, gut microbiome changes linked to colorectal cancer progression

Grant helps UT develop support tool for extreme weather events

Autonomous vehicles can be imperfect — As long as they’re resilient

Asteroid Ceres is a former ocean world that slowly formed into a giant, murky icy orb

McMaster researchers discover what hinders DNA repair in patients with Huntington’s Disease

Estrogens play a hidden role in cancers, inhibiting a key immune cell

A new birthplace for asteroid Ryugu

How are pronouns processed in the memory-region of our brain?

Researchers synthesize high-energy-density cubic gauche nitrogen at atmospheric pressure

Ancient sunken seafloor reveals earth’s deep secrets

Automatic speech recognition learned to understand people with Parkinson’s disease — by listening to them

Addressing global water security challenges: New study reveals investment opportunities and readiness levels

Commonly used drug could transform treatment of rare muscle disorder

Michael Frumovitz, M.D., posthumously honored with Julie and Ben Rogers Award for Excellence

NIH grant supports research to discover better treatments for heart failure

Clinical cancer research in the US is increasingly dominated by pharmaceutical industry sponsors, study finds

Discovery of 3,775-year-old preserved log supports ‘wood vaulting’ as a climate solution

Preterm births are on the rise, with ongoing racial and economic gaps

Menopausal hormone therapy use among postmenopausal women

Breaking the chain of intergenerational violence

Unraveling the role of macrophages in regulating inflammatory lipids during acute kidney injury

Deep underground flooding beneath arima hot springs: A potential trigger for the 1995 Kobe (Hyogo-Ken Nanbu) earthquake

[Press-News.org] Amphibians have one more thing to worry about—mercury—large USGS study shows