Graphical abstract from the publication
Jumpei Okado (Graduate School of Environmental Studies, Nagoya University, Japan) with many coauthors have analysed blood mercury concentrations in more than 11 215 seabirds across 108 species, six of them albatrosses and 32 of other species within the Procellariiformes, publishing open access in the journal Science of The Total Environment.
“It provides the first biologically based estimate of mercury distribution in the ocean. The study shows that mercury levels in seabirds vary with prey trophic level, body weight, and foraging depth.”
The paper’s abstract follows:
“Mercury (Hg) is a global contaminant that biomagnifies in marine food webs. Seabirds can serve as valuable bioindicators of marine Hg pollution due to their high trophic positions and broad distributions. However, the biological and spatial drivers of variation in seabird Hg levels remain unclear, and few studies have validated whether seabird-derived estimates of the spatial distribution of Hg are consistent with predictions from biogeochemical-ocean models. We conducted a global meta-analysis of total Hg (THg) concentrations in adult seabird blood. Based on our own fieldwork and a literature review, we compiled 478 mean THg values from 108 species representing >11,000 individuals. Blood THg increased in species feeding at higher trophic levels, with larger body mass, and those more likely to consume mesopelagic prey in oceanic waters. Additionally, blood THg might further increase in regions with low chlorophyll-a level, likely due to greater methylmercury uptake in areas with low-productivity. We subsequently developed models to predict global spatial variation in seabird blood THg, either from all species or only epipelagic prey feeders. Only our epipelagic prey feeder-based model showed a weak significant positive correlation with THg in particulate organic matter from biogeochemical-ocean models. However, the low correlation coefficient (r = 0.23) indicates potential discrepancies between the two models. We suggest that future studies adopt our integrative approach, combining biological data and large-scale modeling, to improve our understanding of global marine Hg pollution. Together, these findings clarify the biological and environmental drivers of Hg exposure in seabirds and highlight the value of seabirds for global monitoring of marine Hg pollution.”
With thanks to the World Seabird Union.
Reference:
Okado, J. et al. 2026. Global drivers of variation in blood mercury of seabirds revealed by a meta-analysis. Science of the Total Environment 1014. doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2025.181317.
John Cooper, Emeritus Information Officer, Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels, 23 April 2026
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A Wandering Albatross guards its chick on Marion Island, artwork by Lea Finke of Artists & Biologists Unite for Nature (