Mercury contamination in the oceans is a pervasive environmental challenge that demands urgent scientific attention. Traditionally, the distribution and concentration of marine mercury have been inferred through complex biogeochemical simulation models, which predict mercury pathways and deposition based on physical and chemical oceanographic data. However, a groundbreaking international study spearheaded by researchers from Nagoya University in Japan has now shifted this paradigm by providing the first biologically grounded estimate of global oceanic mercury distribution, utilizing an unprecedented meta-analysis of seabird blood mercury concentrations.
This pioneering research integrated empirical data from over 11,215 individual seabirds spanning 108 species worldwide. The collection comprised 659 freshly sampled individuals alongside a comprehensive synthesis of over 10,556 samples extracted from existing peer-reviewed literature. Seabirds, as apex consumers inhabiting diverse marine environments, offer a unique bioindicator role given their trophic positions and wide-ranging foraging behaviors. The study correlates mercury levels with ecological drivers such as prey trophic level, the birds’ body mass, and their foraging depth, thereby elucidating complex biogeochemical interactions that influence mercury bioaccumulation.
Mercury emissions into the global marine ecosystem have escalated dramatically since the onset of the Industrial Revolution, primarily propelled by atmospheric deposition from coal combustion and other anthropogenic activities. Atmospheric mercury can traverse vast distances before precipitating into oceanic waters through rainfall, where its methylation to highly toxic organic forms facilitates bioaccumulation in marine food webs. The toxic methylmercury subsequently concentrates in higher predatory fish and invertebrates, ultimately making its way into seabird tissues via dietary intake, raising concerns about marine and avian health.
The rationale for utilizing seabird blood samples lies in their well-defined breeding behaviors that enable efficient, minimally invasive blood collection when birds come ashore. Blood mercury concentrations in adult seabirds mirror their recent dietary exposure over a window of approximately two months, localized to distinct marine foraging areas. This temporal and spatial specificity in mercury bioaccumulation contrasts with more generalized measures from environmental sampling or other tissues, enabling precise linkage of mercury burdens to oceanic regions and ecosystem dynamics.
Between 2017 and 2024, extensive fieldwork facilitated blood sampling from 659 seabirds representing ten species at breeding colonies distributed across Japan, Alaska, and New Zealand. The samples underwent standardized laboratory protocols, including drying, homogenization, and quantification of total mercury via atomic absorption spectrometry. This standardization was instrumental in harmonizing analytical results by expressing mercury content as total mercury per gram of dry blood weight, allowing valid comparisons across species and geographic locations.
Complementing these new data, the study conducted a rigorous systematic review of scholarly articles published from 1980 to 2025, predominantly post-2010, to compile mercury concentration data from more than 10,556 adult seabirds spanning 105 species. This exhaustive database amalgamated decades of global research, integrating field observations, laboratory measurements, and ecological metadata, thereby enabling robust meta-analytical modeling with enhanced statistical power and biological interpretability.
Analytical results revealed distinct patterns highlighting ecological and physiological drivers of mercury burden. Seabirds occupying higher trophic levels exhibited elevated mercury concentrations, consistent with the biomagnification principle. Larger-bodied birds and those feeding on prey from mesopelagic zones (200 to 1,000 meters depth) demonstrated significantly higher mercury levels, implying that foraging depth modulates mercury exposure due to vertical distribution of methylmercury in aquatic food webs. These insights underscore the complex interplay between seabird ecology and mercury dynamics.
Regionally, statistical assessments uncovered stark contrasts in mercury contamination among ocean basins. Elevated mercury concentrations emerged in the North Atlantic and North Pacific Oceans, as well as the South Pacific Ocean south of 40° latitude, with the highest levels linked to low primary productivity zones characterized by diminished chlorophyll a concentrations. In marked contrast, the South Atlantic and the Southern Ocean exhibited considerably lower contamination, suggesting that physical, biological, and anthropogenic factors create heterogeneous mercury landscapes.
Species-specific vulnerability also surfaced in the analysis, with albatrosses and shearwaters exhibiting disproportionately high mercury burdens relative to other seabird taxa. These species’ extensive foraging ranges and trophic positions likely increase their mercury exposure, painting a concerning picture for conservation efforts aimed at protecting these ecologically critical and often threatened birds from toxic bioaccumulation.
Critically, when juxtaposed with marine biogeochemical simulation models, the seabird-derived mercury distribution patterns showed only weak correlation, suggesting that current simulation approaches may inadequately capture real-world mercury exposure scenarios. The empirical seabird data thus provide a more reliable and biologically relevant metric for oceanic mercury distribution, emphasizing the importance of integrating biological indicators into environmental risk assessments and regulatory frameworks.
According to Professor Akiko Shoji of Nagoya University, this seabird-based method offers an unparalleled window into global ocean health. Because seabirds inhabit ecosystems ranging from tropical to polar, and due to their diverse feeding strategies, their blood mercury profiles synthesize spatial, temporal, and ecological complexity, thereby serving as sentinels of marine mercury pollution on a global scale.
The implications of these findings extend beyond academic insight to practical environmental governance. This method of monitoring mercury in seabird blood can complement and verify the effectiveness of international agreements targeting mercury emission reductions, such as the Minamata Convention. As mercury continues to pose widespread ecological and human health risks, deploying seabird biomonitoring provides an actionable and biologically meaningful strategy for assessing and managing mercury contamination in marine environments.
In sum, this landmark study redefines how researchers can quantify and track mercury pollution in the oceans. By leveraging biological indicators from seabirds globally distributed across trophic and geographic spectra, scientists now possess a powerful tool to unveil regional mercury exposure patterns, improve predictive models, and inform stronger policy responses to mitigate mercury’s ecological footprint in marine ecosystems worldwide.
Subject of Research: Global mercury contamination in marine ecosystems assessed through seabird blood mercury concentrations
Article Title: Global drivers of variation in blood mercury of seabirds revealed by a meta-analysis
News Publication Date: 1-Feb-2026
Web References:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0048969725029596?via%3Dihub
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2025.181317
Image Credits: Jumpei Okado (modified from Okado et al. 2026, licensed under CC BY 4.0)
Keywords: Seabirds, mercury contamination, marine pollution, ecological modeling, bioaccumulation, environmental monitoring, trophic level, methylmercury, ocean health, biomagnification

