Back to Search
Start Over
Waste water discharge from a large Ni-Zn open cast mine degrades benthic integrity of Lake Nuasjärvi (Finland)
- Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- The Talvivaara/Terrafame multi-metal mining company is Europe’s largest nickel open cast mine, it is also known for the largest wastewater leakage in the Finnish mining history and a series of other accidents. In this paleolimnological study, influences of a recently constructed treated waste water discharge pipeline into Lake Nuasjärvi were investigated by analyzing past (pre-disturbance) and present community compositions of key aquatic organism groups, including diatoms, Cladocera and Chironomidae, along spatial (distance, water depth) gradients. In addition to defining ecological changes and impacts of saline mine waters in the lake, chironomids were used to quantitatively reconstruct bottom water oxygen conditions before and after the pipe installation (in 2015). The diatom and cladoceran communities, which reflect more the open-water habitat, showed only relatively minor changes throughout the lake, but a general decrease in diversity was observed within both groups. Chironomids, which live on substrates, showed more significant changes, including complete faunal turnovers and deteriorated benthic quality, especially at the sites close to the pipe outlet, where also chironomid diversity was almost completely lost. Furthermore, the reconstructed hypolimnetic oxygen values indicated a major oxygen decline and even anoxia at the sites near the pipe outlet. The limnoecological influence of the pipe decreased at sites located counter-flow or behind underwater barriers suggesting that the waste waters currently have location-specific impacts. Our study clearly demonstrates that whereas the upper water layers appear to have generally maintained their previous state, the deep-water layers close to the pipe outlet have lost their ecological integrity. Furthermore, the current hypolimnetic anoxia close to the pipe indicates enhanced lake stratification caused by the salinated mine waters. This study clearly exhibits the need to investigate different water bodies at several trophic levels in a spatiotemporal context to be able to reliably assess limnoecological impacts of mining.
- Subjects :
- 010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
CHIRONOMIDAE
Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
Stratification (water)
010501 environmental sciences
Wastewater
Toxicology
01 natural sciences
Paleolimnology
Mining
Bottom water
INFERENCE MODELS
Nickel
Animals
SUMMER HYPOLIMNETIC OXYGEN
14. Life underwater
Ecosystem
Finland
1172 Environmental sciences
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Trophic level
METAL CONTAMINATION
Hydrology
Diatoms
paleolimnology
General Medicine
MIDGES DIPTERA
Cladocera
Mine impact
Pollution
6. Clean water
CLIMATE
Lakes
Zinc
13. Climate action
Benthic zone
EUTROPHICATION
Environmental science
KOLA-PENINSULA
Hypolimnion
Eutrophication
ECOLOGICAL INTEGRITY
SOUTHERN FINLAND
Water Pollutants, Chemical
Environmental Monitoring
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....ee3deea212721d988121dbaf09e09518