AI Article Synopsis

  • Identifying causal relationships between acid mine drainage (AMD) and ecological responses is difficult due to both direct toxic effects and indirect habitat changes caused by mining activities.
  • The research aimed to assess the impacts of physical (metal-oxide deposition) and chemical (high metal concentrations) stressors on benthic macroinvertebrate communities through controlled experiments.
  • Findings suggest that natural community experiments offer a more accurate understanding of AMD's effects and successfully predict the recovery of sensitive species based on metal tolerance and habitat conditions.

Article Abstract

Identifying causal relationships between acid mine drainage (AMD) and ecological responses in the field is challenging. In addition to the direct toxicological effects of elevated metals and reduced pH, mining activities influence aquatic organisms indirectly through physical alterations of habitat. The primary goal of this research was to quantify the relative importance of physical (metal-oxide deposition) and chemical (elevated metal concentrations) stressors on benthic macroinvertebrate communities. Mesocosm experiments conducted with natural assemblages of benthic macroinvertebrates established concentration-response relationships between metals and community structure. Field experiments quantified effects of metal-oxide contaminated substrate and showed significant differences in sensitivity among taxa. To predict the recovery of dominant taxa in the field, we integrated our measures of metal tolerance and substrate tolerance with estimates of drift propensity obtained from the literature. Our estimates of recovery were consistent with patterns observed at downstream recovery sites in the NFCC, which were dominated by caddisflies and baetid mayflies. We conclude that mesocosm and small-scale field experiments, particularly those conducted with natural communities, provide an ecologically realistic complement to laboratory toxicity tests. These experiments also control for the confounding variables associated with field-based approaches, thereby supporting causal relationships between AMD stressors and responses.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5744682PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.6b01911DOI Listing

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