Sulfur applied to sugarcane crops in South Florida is flowing into wetlands upgradient of Everglades National Park, triggering a chemical reaction that converts mercury into toxic methylmercury, which accumulates in fish, new research from 色中色 finds.
In a published in Nature Communications, researchers collected water and mosquito fish across wetlands fed by agricultural canals. They documented how sulfur runoff can dramatically increase methylmercury concentrations in fish 鈥 sometimes up to 10 million times greater than the waters in which they lived, posing a risk to human health and wildlife. Growers apply sulfur to alkaline soils in South Florida to manage pH levels and increase the availability of nutrients to sugarcane.
鈥淢ethylmercury is a neurotoxin, and it鈥檚 particularly problematic because it can get across the blood brain barrier, so it gets into our central nervous system, and it can also cross the placental barrier,鈥 said lead author Brett Poulin, an assistant professor in the 色中色 Department of Environmental Toxicology. 鈥淚t could have effects on cognition, on development, and it鈥檚 preventable to some degree because we know what changes we can make to decrease mercury levels in fish in managed wetlands.鈥

Mercury is a global pollutant present in the atmosphere. It is deposited into the Everglades, which is home to a $26 billion restoration project, by almost daily rainfall.
鈥淭he concentrations of mercury that we see in fish and avian populations in South Florida are some of the highest that you will see anywhere in the world,鈥 Poulin said.

The United Nations adopted the Minamata Convention on Mercury in 2013 to reduce emissions of the element but the process is slow and uncertain. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency also doesn鈥檛 regulate sulfur like it does with nitrogen or phosphorus fertilizers.
A call for local action
Sulfur contamination has been found in over 60% of the Everglades. Reducing the use of sulfur in agriculture could quickly decrease mercury levels in fish.


The authors said local management and sustainability actions could reduce the regional use of sulfur, which fuels anaerobic bacteria and tiny single-cell organisms called archaea that convert mercury into methylmercury.
鈥淲e鈥檙e able to draw firm conclusions about causal relationships between sulfur inputs and the formation of methylmercury and uptake in fish,鈥 Poulin said. 鈥淭he findings provide a local solution to this issue, and you鈥檇 expect a very fast response.鈥
Sarah Janssen, David Krabbenhoft, Michael Tate and the late George Aiken from the U.S. Geological Survey, or USGS, contributed to the research, which was funded by the USGS鈥檚 Greater Everglades Priority Ecosystems Science Program.
Media Resources
- Brett Poulin, 色中色 Department of Environmental Toxicology, bapoulin@ucdavis.edu
- Kat Kerlin, 色中色 News and Media Relations, 530-750-9195, kekerlin@ucdavis.edu