Thienpont, Joshua R.;
Korosi, Jennifer B.;
Hargan, Kathryn E.;
Williams, Trisha;
Eickmeyer, David C.;
Kimpe, Linda E.;
Palmer, Michael J.;
Smol, John P.;
Blais, Jules M.
Multi-trophic level response to extreme metal contamination from gold mining in a subarctic lake
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Media type:
E-Article
Title:
Multi-trophic level response to extreme metal contamination from gold mining in a subarctic lake
Contributor:
Thienpont, Joshua R.;
Korosi, Jennifer B.;
Hargan, Kathryn E.;
Williams, Trisha;
Eickmeyer, David C.;
Kimpe, Linda E.;
Palmer, Michael J.;
Smol, John P.;
Blais, Jules M.
Published:
The Royal Society, 2016
Published in:
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 283 (2016) 1836, Seite 20161125
Language:
English
DOI:
10.1098/rspb.2016.1125
ISSN:
0962-8452;
1471-2954
Origination:
Footnote:
Description:
Giant Mine, located in the city of Yellowknife (Northwest Territories, Canada), is a dramatic example of subarctic legacy contamination from mining activities, with remediation costs projected to exceed $1 billion. Operational between 1948 and 2004, gold extraction at Giant Mine released large quantities of arsenic and metals from the roasting of arsenopyrite ore. We examined the long-term ecological effects of roaster emissions on Pocket Lake, a small lake at the edge of the Giant Mine lease boundary, using a spectrum of palaeoenvironmental approaches. A dated sedimentary profile tracked striking increases (approx. 1700%) in arsenic concentrations coeval with the initiation of Giant Mine operations. Large increases in mercury, antimony and lead also occurred. Synchronous changes in biological indicator assemblages from multiple aquatic trophic levels, in both benthic and pelagic habitats, indicate dramatic ecological responses to extreme metal(loid) contamination. At the peak of contamination, all Cladocera, a keystone group of primary consumers, as well as all planktonic diatoms, were functionally lost from the sediment record. No biological recovery has been inferred, despite the fact that the bulk of metal(loid) emissions occurred more than 50 years ago, and the cessation of all ore-roasting activities in Yellowknife in 1999.