%0 Journal Article %T Hydraulic and Biochemical Gradients Limit Wetland Mercury Supply to an Adirondack Stream %A Celeste A. Journey %A Douglas A. Burns %A Judson W. Harvey %A Karen Riva-Murray %A Mark E. Brigham %A Paul M. Bradley %J Journal of Marine Biology | Open Access Journal |Research and Development | Aquaculture %D 2016 %R http://dx.doi.org/10.15226/24754706/1/1/00102 %X Net fluxes (change between upstream and downstream margins) for water, methyl mercury (MeHg), total mercury (THg), dissolved organic carbon (DOC), and chloride (Cl) were assessed twice in an Adirondack stream reach (Sixmile Brook, USA), to test the hypothesized importance of wetland-stream hydraulic and chemical gradients as fundamental controls on fluvial mercury (Hg) supply. The 500 m study reach represented less than 4%of total upstream basin area. During a snowmelt high-flow event in May 2009surface water, DOC, and chloride fluxes increased by 7.1¡À1.3%, 8.0¡À1.3%, and 9.0¡À1.3%, respectively, within the reach, demonstrating that the adjacent wetlands are important sources of water and solutes to the stream. However, shallow groundwater Hg concentrations lower than in the surface water limited groundwater-surface water Hg exchange and no significant changes in Hg (filtered MeHg and THg) fluxes were observed within the reach despite the favorable hydraulic gradient. In August 2009, the lack of significant wetland-stream hydraulic gradient resulted in no net flux of water or solutes (MeHg, THg, DOC, or Cl) within the reach. The results are consistent with the wetland- Hg-source hypothesis and indicate that hydraulic and chemical gradient (direction and magnitude) interactions are fundamental controls on the supply of wetland Hg to the stream %U https://symbiosisonlinepublishing.com/marine-biology-research/marine-biology-research02.php