Columbia Environmental Research Center, US Geological Survey, Columbia, Missouri, USA.
Geology, Geophysics, and Geochemistry Science Center, US Geological Survey, Denver, Colorado, USA.
Environ Toxicol Chem. 2022 Jul;41(7):1696-1710. doi: 10.1002/etc.5342. Epub 2022 May 27.
Historical mining left a legacy of abandoned mines and waste rock in remote headwaters of major river systems in the western United States. Understanding the influence of these legacy mines on culturally and ecologically important downstream ecosystems is not always straightforward because of elevated natural levels of mineralization in mining-impacted watersheds. To test the ecological effects of historic mining in the headwaters of the upper Salmon River watershed in Idaho (USA), we measured multiple community and chemical endpoints in downstream linked aquatic-terrestrial food webs. Mining inputs impacted downstream food webs through increased mercury accumulation and decreased insect biodiversity. Total mercury (THg) in seston, aquatic insect larvae, adult aquatic insects, riparian spiders, and fish at sites up to 7.6 km downstream of mining was found at much higher concentrations (1.3-11.3-fold) and was isotopically distinct compared with sites immediately upstream of mining inputs. Methylmercury concentrations in bull trout and riparian spiders were sufficiently high (732-918 and 347-1140 ng MeHg g dry wt, respectively) to affect humans, birds, and piscivorous fish. Furthermore, the alpha-diversity of benthic insects was locally depressed by 12%-20% within 4.3-5.7 km downstream from the mine. However, because total insect biomass was not affected by mine inputs, the mass of mercury in benthic insects at a site (i.e., ng Hg m ) was extremely elevated downstream (10-1778-fold) compared with directly upstream of mining inputs. Downstream adult aquatic insect-mediated fluxes of THg were also high (~16 ng THg m day ). Abandoned mines can have ecologically important effects on downstream communities, including reduced biodiversity and increased mercury flux to higher order consumers, including fish, birds, and humans. Environ Toxicol Chem 2022;41:1696-1710. Published 2022. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.
历史采矿在美西主要河流的源头地区留下了废弃矿山和废石堆。由于采矿影响的流域中存在较高的天然矿化水平,因此理解这些遗留矿山对文化和生态重要的下游生态系统的影响并不总是那么直接。为了测试美国爱达荷州上萨蒙河流域源头地区历史采矿的生态影响,我们测量了下游连锁水生-陆地食物网中的多个群落和化学终点。采矿投入通过增加汞积累和减少昆虫生物多样性来影响下游食物网。在距离采矿点上游 7.6 公里范围内,悬浮物、水生昆虫幼虫、成年水生昆虫、河岸蜘蛛和鱼类中的总汞(THg)浓度更高(1.3-11.3 倍),且与采矿投入点的同位素特征明显不同。虹鳟鱼和河岸蜘蛛体内的甲基汞浓度(分别为 732-918 和 347-1140ng MeHg g-干重)非常高,足以影响人类、鸟类和食鱼动物。此外,在距离矿山 4.3-5.7 公里范围内,底栖昆虫的 α-多样性局部下降了 12%-20%。然而,由于底栖昆虫的总生物量不受矿山投入的影响,因此与矿山投入直接上游相比,一个地点(即 ng Hg m)的底栖昆虫体内的汞质量极高(10-1778 倍)。下游成虫水生昆虫介导的 THg 通量也很高(约 16ng THg m-2 day-1)。废弃矿山可能对下游群落产生重要的生态影响,包括生物多样性减少和向包括鱼类、鸟类和人类在内的更高营养级消费者增加汞通量。环境毒理化学 2022;41:1696-1710。2022 年出版。本文是美国政府的作品,在美国属于公有领域。