Technical Information Report on Mercury Monitoring in Biota

Biota are important bioindicators because they reflect the potential harm of emissions and releases of mercury to air, water and land. Because there are not suitable models to predict the methylation process and the entry of methylmercury into the food web, high trophic level biota is recommended (i.e., trophic level 4 or higher). High trophic level biota can therefore be used to identify spatial gradients, including ecosystem sensitivity spots, and to track changes over time. The technical report compiled and synthesized information available through the “Global Biotic Mercury Synthesis” or GBMS, this database on mercury in biota and identified information and data gaps, comparability, options for filling gaps, available modelling capabilities to assess changes, baselines, and proposed monitoring approaches with an estimated budget.

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Source https://wedocs.unep.org/20.500.11822/30821
Author Economy Division
Maintainer Economy Division
Last Updated January 25, 2023, 17:25 (UTC)
Created January 25, 2023, 17:25 (UTC)
GUID 925f44f8-553e-48be-bbee-48c658fd3a41
Issued 2019-11-20T09:09:58Z
Language English
Modified 2022-10-19 17:48:42.398
Publisher name Economy Division
Theme Reports, Books and Booklets
data_type document
spatial