January 24 Superfund Program Speaker - Dr. Amina Schartup

Talk by Amina Schartup, Ph.D. on "From Air to Hair: Mercury Cycling in the Arctic and Subarctic". Dr. Schartup is Research Associate, Harvard University, J.A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS)

January 24, 2017
2:00 pm - 3:30 pm
Location
Vail 202
Sponsored by
Toxic Metals Superfund Research Program
Audience
Alumni, Faculty, Staff, Students-Graduate, Students-Undergraduate
More information
Marcy Levine-Holdowsky

Dr. Schartup will present her latest contributions to the understanding of methylmercury cycling in the Arctic and Subarctic. She also will discuss a study which predicts changes in methylmercury exposures in a Subarctic Inuit community following an industry-driven perturbation.

Methylmercury is a potent neurotoxin and northern communities are especially vulnerable due to the large quantities of fish and marine mammals they consume. Elevated methylmercury levels have been reported in many Arctic ecosystems despite recent global declines in anthropogenic emissions. Elevated concentrations in Arctic biota have been attributed to enhanced atmospheric deposition and to the structure of Arctic food webs. Inorganic mercury deposited from the atmosphere to watersheds and ocean surface undergoes a range of physico-chemical and microbial processes during its conversion to methylmercury and uptake by biota. The drivers of methylmercury production and bioaccumulation are not well known and there exists no quantitative framework linking biogeochemical changes to human methylmercury exposures. Hence, we have a limited ability to forecast the spatial extent or magnitude of risks to human health following a perturbation.

Location
Vail 202
Sponsored by
Toxic Metals Superfund Research Program
Audience
Alumni, Faculty, Staff, Students-Graduate, Students-Undergraduate
More information
Marcy Levine-Holdowsky