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dc.contributor.advisorDrenner, Ray
dc.contributor.authorHannappel, Maddy
dc.date2017-05-19
dc.date.accessioned2017-06-30T16:22:00Z
dc.date.available2017-06-30T16:22:00Z
dc.date.issued2017
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.tcu.edu/handle/116099117/19850
dc.description.abstractMethyl mercury (MeHg) is a highly toxic environmental contaminant found in all waterbodies. Mercury (Hg) is primarily from anthropogenic emissions that are deposited into watersheds and water bodies. In aquatic ecosystems, aquatic bacteria convert the non-bioaccumulative inorganic form of Hg into the highly toxic and bioaccumulative methyl form of Hg (MeHg) which is incorporated in the aquatic food chain. Spiders become contaminated with MeHg by consuming emergent aquatic insects that transport MeHg from aquatic to the terrestrial environment. Methyl mercury-contaminated spiders pose a health risk to spider-consuming birds. Spiders can be used as biological monitors (biosentinels) of MeHg. My study examined if spiders in the nests of mud daubers (Sceliphron caementarium) could be used as biosentinels of MeHg contamination in the environment. Adult mud daubers capture spiders with a paralyzing sting and use them as the food source for the larvae in their nests. I collected 350 mud dauber nests from four sites near the Trinity River in Fort Worth, TX. Over 2,000 spiders of five different families were collected from the nests. All five taxa of spiders were contaminated with Hg, with a significant difference in Hg between spider taxa. The concentrations of Hg in the spiders were high enough to pose a risk to nestling songbirds consuming them. This study is the first to suggest that mud dauber nests can act as a source of spiders to be used as biosentinels for MeHg contamination of the environment.
dc.subjectMud Daubers
dc.subjectMercury
dc.titleSpiders In Mud Dauber Nests As Biosentinels Of Mercury Contamination
etd.degree.departmentBiology
local.collegeCollege of Science and Engineering
local.collegeJohn V. Roach Honors College
local.departmentBiology
local.publicnoteFull text permanently unavailable by request of author. Contact author for access.


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