Centro de Investigación Tecnológica del Agua en el Desierto (CEITSAZA-UCN), Antofagasta, Chile.
Departamento de Ciencias Geológicas, Universidad Católica del Norte, Antofagasta, Chile.
PLoS One. 2020 Feb 21;15(2):e0229453. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0229453. eCollection 2020.
The Atacama Desert (21-26°S) is currently one of the driest places on Earth and metal(loid)s are of special concern for this region, which hosts the largest-known porphyry copper deposits produced in Chile. Evidence of past environmental conditions is commonly preserved in natural archives, such as lacustrine sediments. Sediment records obtained from Inca Coya Lake (22°20'S-68°35'W, 2534 m.a.s.l.), a small lake located in the Atacama Desert, reflected the evolution of regional mining activity during the 20th century and sedimentation associated with decadal climate variability. We studied the aquatic community structure changes recorded in sediment records from Inca Coya Lake. By analysis of magnetic properties (susceptibility, hysteresis curves and Curie temperatures), grain size and geochemical composition of the sediments, we identified environmental periods and changes in the community of benthic and planktonic organisms (diatoms and diapausing egg bank). We identified three detrital episodes that we interpret as dry/wet phases during the last 90 years associated with the increase of flash flood events promoting hypoxia oscillations; anthropogenic (mining activity) signals were also identified. Invertebrate community structure (primary consumers) reflected the metal exposure, measured as changes in assemblage composition through species turnover. Diatom community composition was best associated with variables related to wetter/drier alternation and consequent changes in oxygen availability. Bioindicators analyzed (diatoms, diapausing egg bank and invertebrate community) demonstrated to be excellent indicators of the bioavailability of compounds in the aquatic ecosystem of Inca Coya Lake, allowing the environmental impact assessment of the water resources due to flash floods and mining activity in the driest desert of the world.
阿塔卡马沙漠(南纬 21-26°)是地球上最干旱的地区之一,金属(类)物质是该地区特别关注的问题,该地区拥有智利已知最大的斑岩铜矿矿床。过去环境条件的证据通常保存在自然档案中,例如湖泊沉积物。从印加科亚湖(南纬 22°20' - 西经 68°35',海拔 2534 米)获得的沉积物记录反映了 20 世纪该地区采矿活动的演变以及与年代际气候变异性相关的沉积作用。我们研究了印加科亚湖沉积物记录中记录的水生群落结构变化。通过分析磁性特性(磁化率、磁滞回线和居里温度)、沉积物的粒度和地球化学成分,我们确定了环境时期和底栖和浮游生物(硅藻和休眠卵库)群落的变化。我们确定了三个碎屑事件,我们将其解释为过去 90 年中与洪水事件增加相关的干湿阶段,促进了缺氧振荡;还确定了人为(采矿活动)信号。无脊椎动物群落结构(初级消费者)反映了金属暴露,通过物种更替来衡量组合组成的变化。硅藻群落组成与与干湿交替相关的变量以及随后氧气可用性的变化密切相关。分析的生物标志物(硅藻、休眠卵库和无脊椎动物群落)被证明是印加科亚湖水生生态系统中化合物生物可利用性的极好指标,允许对由于洪水和世界上最干旱沙漠中的采矿活动而对水资源造成的环境影响进行评估。