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Dive into the research topics where Carl H. Lamborg is active.

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Featured researches published by Carl H. Lamborg.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2015

Mercury species concentrations and fluxes in the Central Tropical Pacific Ocean

Kathleen M. Munson; Carl H. Lamborg; Gretchen J. Swarr; Mak A. Saito

The formation of the toxic and bioaccumulating monomethylmercury (MMHg) in marine systems is poorly understood, due in part to sparse data from many ocean regions. We present dissolved mercury (Hg) speciation data from 10 stations in the North and South Equatorial Pacific spanning large water mass differences and gradients in oxygen utilization. We also compare the mercury content in suspended particles from six stations and sinking particles from three stations to constrain local Hg sources and sinks. Concentrations of total Hg (THg) and methylated Hg in the surface and intermediate waters of the Equatorial and South Pacific suggest Hg cycling distinct from that of the North Pacific gyre. Maximum concentrations of 180 fM for both MMHg and dimethylmercury (DMHg) are observed in the Equatorial Pacific. South of the equator, concentrations of MMHg and DMHg are less than 100 fM. Sinking fluxes of particulate THg can reasonably explain the shape of dissolved THg profiles, but those of MMHg are too low to account for dissolved MMHg profiles. However, methylated Hg species are lower than predicted from remineralization rates based on North Pacific data, consistent with limitation of methylation in Equatorial and South Pacific waters. Full water column depth profiles were also measured for the first time in these regions. Concentrations of THg are elevated in deep waters of the North Pacific, compared to those in the intermediate and surface waters, and taper off in the South Pacific. Comparisons with previous measurements from nearby regions suggest little enrichment of THg or MMHg over the past 20 years.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2016

An examination of the role of particles in oceanic mercury cycling

Carl H. Lamborg; Chad R. Hammerschmidt; Katlin L. Bowman

Recent models of global mercury (Hg) cycling have identified the downward flux of sinking particles in the ocean as a prominent Hg removal process from the ocean. At least one of these models estimates the amount of anthropogenic Hg in the ocean to be about 400 Mmol, with deep water formation and sinking fluxes representing the largest vectors by which pollutant Hg is able to penetrate the ocean interior. Using data from recent cruises to the Atlantic, we examined the dissolved and particulate partitioning of Hg in the oceanic water column as a cross-check on the hypothesis that sinking particle fluxes are important. Interestingly, these new data suggest particle-dissolved partitioning (Kd) that is approximately 20× greater than previous estimates, which thereby challenges certain assumptions about the scavenging and active partitioning of Hg in the ocean used in earlier models. For example, the new particle data suggest that regenerative scavenging is the most likely mechanism by which the association of Hg and particles occurs. This article is part of the themed issue ‘Biological and climatic impacts of ocean trace element chemistry’.


Science of The Total Environment | 2015

Deforestation and cultivation mobilize mercury from topsoil

Rebecca L. Gamby; Chad R. Hammerschmidt; David M. Costello; Carl H. Lamborg; James R. Runkle

Terrestrial biomass and soils are a primary global reservoir of mercury (Hg) derived from natural and anthropogenic sources; however, relatively little is known about the fate and stability of Hg in the surface soil reservoir and its susceptibility to change as a result of deforestation and cultivation. In southwest Ohio, we measured Hg concentrations in soils of deciduous old- and new-growth forests, as well as fallow grassland and agricultural soils that had once been forested to examine how, over decadal to century time scales, man-made deforestation and cultivation influence Hg mobility from temperate surface soils. Mercury concentrations in surficial soils were significantly greater in the old-growth than new-growth forest, and both forest soils had greater Hg concentrations than cultivated and fallow fields. Differences in Hg:lead ratios between old-growth forest and agricultural topsoils suggest that about half of the Hg lost from deforested and cultivated Ohio soils may have been volatilized and the other half eroded. The estimated mobilization potential of Hg as a result of deforestation was 4.1 mg m(-2), which was proportional to mobilization potentials measured at multiple locations in the Amazon relative to concentrations in forested surface soils. Based on this relationship and an estimate of the global average of Hg concentrations in forested soils, we approximate that about 550 M mol of Hg has been mobilized globally from soil as a result of deforestation during the past two centuries. This estimate is comparable to, if not greater than, the amount of anthropogenic Hg hypothesized by others to have been sequestered by the soil reservoir since Industrialization. Our results suggest that deforestation and soil cultivation are significant anthropogenic processes that exacerbate Hg mobilization from soil and its cycling in the environment.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2018

Global and Local Sources of Mercury Deposition in Coastal New England Reconstructed from a Multiproxy, High-Resolution, Estuarine Sediment Record

William F. Fitzgerald; Daniel R. Engstrom; Chad R. Hammerschmidt; Carl H. Lamborg; Prentiss H. Balcom; Ana L. Lima-Braun; Michael H. Bothner; Christopher M. Reddy

Historical reconstruction of mercury (Hg) accumulation in natural archives, especially lake sediments, has been essential to understanding human perturbation of the global Hg cycle. Here we present a high-resolution chronology of Hg accumulation between 1727 and 1996 in a varved sediment core from the Pettaquamscutt River Estuary (PRE), Rhode Island. Mercury accumulation is examined relative to (1) historic deposition of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and lead (Pb) and its isotopes (206Pb/207Pb) in the same core, and (2) other reconstructions of Hg deposition in urban and remote settings. Mercury deposition in PRE parallels the temporal patterns of PAHs, and both track industrialization and regional coal use between 1850 and 1950 as well as rising petroleum use after 1950. There is little indication of increased Hg deposition from late 19th-century silver and gold mining in the western U.S. A broad maximum of Hg deposition during 1930-1980, and not found in remote sites, is consistent with the predicted influence of additional industrial sources and commercial products. Our results imply that a significant portion of global anthropogenic Hg emissions during the 20th century was deposited locally, near urban and industrial centers of Hg use and release.


Environmental Pollution | 2018

Presence of artisanal gold mining predicts mercury bioaccumulation in five genera of bats (Chiroptera)

Anjali Kumar; Timothy J. Divoll; Priya M. Ganguli; Florencia A. Trama; Carl H. Lamborg

Mercury, a toxic trace metal, has been used extensively as an inexpensive and readily available method of extracting gold from fine-grained sediment. Worldwide, artisanal mining is responsible for one third of all mercury released into the environment. By testing bat hair from museum specimens and field collected samples from areas both impacted and unimpacted by artisanal gold mining in Perú, we show monomethylmercury (MMHg) has increased in the last 100 years. MMHg concentrations were also greatest in the highest bat trophic level (insectivores), and in areas experiencing extractive artisanal mining. Reproductive female bats had higher MMHg concentrations, and both juvenile and adult bats from mercury contaminated sites had more MMHg than those from uncontaminated sites. Bats have important ecological functions, providing vital ecosystem services such as pollination, seed dispersal, and insect control. Natural populations can act as environmental sentinels and offer the chance to expand our understanding of, and responses to, environmental and human health concerns.


Biogeosciences | 2015

Seasonal hydrology drives rapid shifts in the flux and composition of dissolved and particulate organic carbon and major and trace ions in the Fraser River, Canada

Britta Voss; Bernhard Peucker-Ehrenbrink; Timothy I. Eglinton; Robert G. M. Spencer; E. B. Bulygina; Valier Galy; Carl H. Lamborg; Priya M. Ganguli; Daniel B. Montlucon; Steve Marsh; Sharon Gillies; Jenna Fanslau; A. Epp; Rosalie Luymes


Limnology and Oceanography | 2017

Thaumarchaeal ecotype distributions across the equatorial Pacific Ocean and their potential roles in nitrification and sinking flux attenuation

Alyson E. Santoro; Mak A. Saito; Tyler J. Goepfert; Carl H. Lamborg; Christopher L. Dupont; Giacomo R. DiTullio


Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers | 2017

The air-sea exchange of mercury in the low latitude Pacific and Atlantic Oceans

Robert P. Mason; Chad R. Hammerschmidt; Carl H. Lamborg; Katlin L. Bowman; Gretchen J. Swarr; Rachel U. Shelley


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2015

Mercury species concentrations and fluxes in the Central Tropical Pacific Ocean: CENTRAL PACIFIC MERCURY

Kathleen M. Munson; Carl H. Lamborg; Gretchen J. Swarr; Mak A. Saito


Biogeosciences Discussions | 2018

Dynamic mercury methylation and demethylation in oligotrophic marine water

Kathleen M. Munson; Carl H. Lamborg; Rene M. Boiteau; Mak A. Saito

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Mak A. Saito

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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Gretchen J. Swarr

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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Daniel R. Engstrom

Science Museum of Minnesota

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Priya M. Ganguli

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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