A11C-3026:
Methylmercury and other chemical constituents in Pacific coastal fog water from seven sites in Central/Northern California (FogNet) during the summer of 2014

Monday, 15 December 2014
Peter Scott Weiss-Penzias1, Wesley Alan Heim2, Daniel Fernandez3, Kenneth H Coale4, Andrew Oliphant5, David Dann6, Michael Porter6, Dave Hoskins7 and Celeste Dodge8, (1)University California Santa Cr, Santa Cruz, CA, United States, (2)Moss Landing Marine Laboratories, Moss Landing, CA, United States, (3)CSUMB, Seaside, CA, United States, (4)California State University Monterey Bay, Seaside, CA, United States, (5)San Francisco State University, Geography, San Francisco, CA, United States, (6)Bodega Marine Lab, Bodega Bay, CA, United States, (7)Humboldt Marine Labs, Trinidad, CA, United States, (8)Pepperwood Preserve, Santa Rosa, CA, United States
Abstract:
This project investigates the mercury content in summertime Pacific coastal fog in California and whether fog could be an important vector for ocean emissions of mercury to be deposited via fog drip to upland coastal ecosystems. Efforts began in early 2014 with the building of 7 active-strand fog collectors based on the Colorado State University Caltech CASCC design. The new UCSC CASCC includes doors sealing the collector which open under microcomputer control based on environmental sensing (relative humidity). Seven sites spanning from Trinidad in the north to Marina in the south have collected samples June-August 2014 under a project called FogNet. Fog conditions were favorable for collecting large water volumes (> 250 mL) at many sites. Fog samplers were cleaned with soap and deionized water daily and field blanks taken immediately following cleaning. Fog water samples were collected overnight, split into an aliquot for anion and DOC/DIC analysis and the remaining sample was acidified. Monomethyl mercury (MMHg) concentrations in samples and field blanks for 3 sites in FogNet are shown in the accompanying figure. The range of MMHg concentrations from 10 fog water samples > 100 mL in volume was 0.9-9.3 ng/L (4.5-46.4 pM). Elevated MMHg concentrations (> 5 ng/L, 25 pM) were observed at 2 sites: UC Santa Cruz and Bodega Bay. The field blanks produced MMHg concentrations of 0.08-0.4 ng/L (0.4-2.0 pM), which was on average < 10% of the sample concentration and suggests the artifact due to sampling was small. The observed MMHg concentrations in fog water observed is this study are 1-2 orders of magnitude greater than MMHg concentrations seen previously in rain water samples from the California coast suggesting an additional source of MMHg to fog. Shipboard measurements of dimethyl mercury (DMHg) in coastal California seawater during the time period of FogNet operations (summer 2014) reveal surface waters that were supersaturated in DMHg which represents a potential source of organic mercury to the overlying fog bank.