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See also: Mercury in their Midst, Natural Match: Mercury in the Everglades,
Mercury Facts, What's Safe
Mercury in Their Midst
When released into
the environment in substantial amounts over a period of time, mercury is
a well-documented killer, not only of wildlife but of people as well.
The raw element itself,
still called quicksilver by some, is the only common metal found in nature
thats liquid at ordinary temperatures. Humans have found hundreds of uses
for it, from making medicines to the manufacture of other products ranging
from pesticides to paints, thermometers to hats. The phrase mad as a hatter
comes from centuries past, when mercury was used in the manufacture of
felt hats. A common byproduct was mentally and physically impaired workers,
hapless victims of acute mercury poisoning.
Mercurys pathway
into Everglades wildlife primarily begins in the skies, with
mercury-loaded rainfall. Sulfate-reducing bacteria, mainly living in sediments
and in mats of floating algae, absorb rainwater mercury and turn it into
its organic form, methylmercury (CH3Hg+). Microorganisms
which eat such bacteria feed successive populations of larger organisms
in the food web. At each step, methylmercury levels get concentrated. For
wetland-dependent animals such as wading birds, raccoons and some panthers,
concentrations can reach dangerously high levels. (BRUCE HALL ILLUSTRATION) |
Like most elements, mercury
is something of a chameleon, able to assume many forms. In the environment,
the most toxic form is methylmercury, a tasteless, colorless and odorless
compound that readily enters the food chain. Once in the tissues of organisms,
methylmercury has a strong tendency to stay put. Over time, the compound
can build up to dangerous levels in fish, shellfish and other aquatic life.
People and wildlife with heavy diets of such tainted foods can accumulate
the poison as well and suffer crippling, even lethal consequences.
In the digestive tract,
methylmercury gets rapidly absorbed and can invade all tissues, including
the brain and the wombs of pregnant women. In high enough concentrations,
the neurotoxin can cause irreversable brain and nerve damage, seizures,
kidney failure, even blindness.
Of all the abuses of
mercury by manufacturers this century, by far the worst occurred in Japan,
in the vicinity of a small fishing village on the island of Kyushu. Between
1953 and 1960, the Chisso Chemical Company dumped mercury-loaded sludge
into Minimata Bay, where it accumulated in fish and shellfish. The pollution
killed fish, seabirds, housecats--and reportedly as many as 700 inhabitants
of the bayshore village. Hundreds more were crippled, including scores
of babies born with horrific birth defects.
Nothing so terrible
has happened in the U.S., although there have been numerous instances of
methylmercury poisoning. The first example to draw significant public attention
was in 1969, when some children in New Mexico got sick from eating hog
meat from animals fed mercury-treated feed grain.
As it happens, indigenous
peoples tend to eat lots of fish, which too often puts them at risk for
mercury poisoning. Miners in Brazil use tons of mercury each year in a
process for gleaning gold dust from rivers near Manaus. In the early 1990s,
health officials found downstream forest peoples with methylmercury in
their systems at levels up to four times a World Health Organization safety
standard.
In 1983, Pomo Indians
in California had to stop eating so many local fish because of high mercury
in the fillets. Two bands of Indians in Ontario, Canada were awarded an
$18.6 million settlement in a 1986 lawsuit against a paper mill that had
poisoned a river that gave the Indians their livelihood. Mercury-loaded
fish from the river sickened dozens of tribe members, and resulted in the
birth of several infants with severe mental and physical defects.
Chippewa Indians in
Wisconsin in 1990 were found to have blood levels of mercury high enough
to cause developmental problems in fetuses. The Chippewas had a fondness
for the walleye that swam in local lakes.
In Florida, Miccosukees
and Seminoles are obliged to deal with a mercury contamination problem
that defies belief. Their tribal lands are virtually synonymous with much
of the Everglades, one of the largest tracts of unsullied wilderness left
in the world--with one exception. Although statistics arent clear on the
point, the Everglades may have the highest levels of mercury contamination
ever seen in a freshwater ecosystem, period.
Most Everglades fish,
turtles, alligators, wading birds, raccoons and even some insects carry
mercury burdens way above normal. The average concentration of methylmercury
in a fillet of an Everglades largemouth bass is 1.5 parts per million (ppm),
three times what the states Department of Health calls safe.
To many Everglades
Indians, the mercury problem is just one more insult to their environment
they must deal with, says Joe Quetone, director of the Gov. Lawton Chiles
Council on Indian Affairs. The tribes already are battling exotic species
of fish and other wildlife, saltwater intrusion and pollution from agribusiness.
Theyve just added mercury to the list, Quetone said.
Still, some tribal
leaders are fully resentful of how the Glades mercury issue has been handled
by state authorities and have balked at what they call being singled out
by health officials for mercury testing. So far, no evidence has surfaced
that indicates a health problem tied to mercury among any of the Everglades
human inhabitants.
But that may be because
many Indians dont eat fish anymore, said one Miccosukee woman living in
Big Cypress. Nobody eats these fish around here, she said. When we want
fish, we do like everybody else--we go to Publix. --F.S.
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