91快色

May 28, 2025

Coastal Alaska wolves exposed to high mercury concentrations from eating sea otters: research

U91快色 ecotoxicology expert Ben Barst contributes to study of marine food鈥檚 impact on predators
A wolf sits on a pile of rocks
Wolf No. 202006 when she was captured and collared for research. Courtesy Gretchen Roffler/Alaska Department of Fish and Game

In late 2020, a female coastal wolf collared for a study on predation patterns unexpectedly died in southeastern Alaska. 

The wolf, No. 202006, was only four years old. 

鈥淲e spent quite a bit of time trying to figure out the cause of her death by doing a necropsy and different analyses of tissues,鈥 says , a wildlife research biologist with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.

鈥淲hat finally came up was really unprecedented concentrations of mercury in this wolf鈥檚 liver and kidneys and other tissues.鈥

Roffler was put in touch with Dr. , PhD, an assistant professor in the  at the 91快色 who was working at the University of Alaska Fairbanks at the time.

They, along with a team of other scientists, have now  that shows wolves eating sea otters have much higher concentrations of mercury than those eating other prey such as deer and moose.

Mercury found in high concentrations in predators

Barst, an expert in ecotoxicology, says mercury is a naturally occurring element humans release from the Earth鈥檚 crust through coal combustion and small-scale gold mining.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a really weird metal in that it鈥檚 liquid at room temperature or it can be a vapour,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hen it gets into the atmosphere in its elemental form, it can travel for really long distances.鈥

Barst says it also gets converted into methyl mercury when it gets into aquatic environments.

鈥淚t鈥檚 an organic form of mercury that really moves quite efficiently through the food web, and so it can reach high concentrations in predators that are tapped into aquatic food webs," he says. "So, we see higher concentrations in wolves that are tapped into a marine system.鈥

The latest research compares wolves from Pleasant Island 鈥 located in the Alaska Panhandle region, west of Juneau 鈥 with the population on the mainland adjacent to the island, as well as wolves from interior Alaska.

鈥淭he highest concentrations are the wolves from Pleasant Island,鈥 says Barst, noting that the mainland population mostly feeds on moose and the odd sea otter.

He says there could be a number of factors driving the higher concentrations of mercury, but they are still researching several possibilities. 

A coastal wolf eats a sea otter in Alaska

A coastal wolf eats a sea otter in Alaska.

Landon Bazeley

Mercury-wolf health impact examined

Researchers are also doing more work to determine mercury鈥檚 role in impacting wolf health, as it remains unclear exactly what caused the death of Wolf No. 202006.

Barst notes, however, that years of data collected by Roffler show that 70 per cent of the island wolves鈥 diet is sea otters.

鈥淭hey're eating so many sea otters that they're just getting this higher dose of mercury and it accumulates over time,鈥 he says.

Roffler says there are other populations of wolves in Alaska as well as in B.C. that appear to be eating sea otters.

鈥淚t turns out that this might be a more widespread phenomenon than we thought originally,鈥 she says. 鈥淎t first I was surprised it was happening at all.鈥

It鈥檚 not yet known whether the sea otters off the B.C. coast also contain high levels of mercury.

Potential link to climate change

Back in Alaska, Barst says there鈥檚 a potential link to climate change due to the state's shrinking glaciers.

鈥淲e know that glaciers can release a tremendous amount of mercury,鈥 he says. 鈥淚n coastal Alaska, glaciers are retreating at some of the most rapid rates in the world.

鈥淲ith that melting of glaciers, you get release of the particulate bedrock and some of that bedrock contains mercury 鈥 and so we don鈥檛 really know the fate of that mercury. It may just get buried in sediments or it may actually be available for conversion to methyl mercury and get into the food web.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 part of what we鈥檙e doing now.鈥

Dr. Ben Barst, PhD, is an assistant professor in the Department of Earth, Energy and Environment and the Department of Biological Sciences in the Faculty of Science.

Dr. Gretchen Roffler is a wildlife research biologist with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Division of Wildlife Conservation.