Literature DB >> 18386149

Biomonitoring acidic drainage impact in a complex setting using periphyton.

Santiago de la Peña1, Rodolfo Barreiro.   

Abstract

Acid mine drainage (AMD) often exerts various environmental pressures on nearby water courses: chemical stress from low pH and dissolved metals; physical stress from metal oxide deposits. Affected streams can thus display a spatially variable combination of stress agents that may complicate its biomonitoring using native communities such as periphyton. Here, we have measured water and periphyton variables in four streams that surround an abandoned copper mine to determine which periphyton attributes consistently detected AMD impact in a complex environmental setting. Seventeen years after the end of commercial exploitation, the abandoned mine still decreases water quality in nearby streams: moderate acidification, very high metal load (Al, Ni, Cu, Zn), and a conspicuous presence of metal oxide deposits with diverse composition. Even under the resultant complex pattern of polluted conditions, periphyton was a reliable bioindicator of AMD. Epilithic diatom taxa tolerant of acidic conditions increased in AMD sites and, at severely impacted locations, species richness decreased. Also, algal biomass may have been negatively affected in some stream reaches affected by metal oxide deposits. Other periphyton attributes (total biomass, diatom diversity) seemed mostly unrelated to AMD. Diatom assemblage composition was the most sensitive and consistent bioindicator of mine drainage; besides, it rendered a biological assessment of AMD impact that largely coincided with the physicochemical evaluation. Still, including other taxonomic (proportion of acid-tolerant diatom species, diatom richness) and non-taxonomic (algal biomass) attributes in the biomonitoring procedure rendered a more comprehensive assessment of the negative consequences generated by AMD.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18386149     DOI: 10.1007/s10661-008-0235-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Monit Assess        ISSN: 0167-6369            Impact factor:   3.307


  1 in total

1.  Impact of acid mine drainage on benthic communities in streams: the relative roles of substratum vs. aqueous effects.

Authors:  Dean M DeNicol; Michael G Stapleton
Journal:  Environ Pollut       Date:  2002       Impact factor: 8.071

  1 in total
  1 in total

1.  Use of diatom assemblages as biomonitor of the impact of treated uranium mining effluent discharge on a stream: case study of the Ritord watershed (Center-West France).

Authors:  Olivier Herlory; Jean-Marc Bonzom; Rodolphe Gilbin; Sandrine Frelon; Stéphanie Fayolle; François Delmas; Michel Coste
Journal:  Ecotoxicology       Date:  2013-08-01       Impact factor: 2.823

  1 in total

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