Educação especial e reabilitação
Carvalho, Olívio da Costa
1989-
Type
article
Creator
Publisher
Identifier
GOMES, P. V. [et al.] (2021) - Acid mine drainage and relationships with pollutants in a degraded mining ecosystem. Minerals. ISSN 2075-163X. 11(2):110. https://doi.org/10.3390/min11020110
2075-163X
10.3390/min11020110
Title
Algae in acid mine drainage and relationships with pollutants in a degraded mining ecosystem
Subject
Acid mine drainage
Mougeotia
Acidophilic algae
Photogrammetric products
Factorial correspondence analysis
Ecological monitoring
Iberian pyrite belt
Mougeotia
Acidophilic algae
Photogrammetric products
Factorial correspondence analysis
Ecological monitoring
Iberian pyrite belt
Date
2021-02-10T10:30:43Z
2021-02-10T10:30:43Z
2021
2021-02-10T10:30:43Z
2021
Description
Acid mine drainage represents an extreme environment with high concentrations of potentially
toxic elements and low pH values. These aquatic habitats are characterised by harsh conditions
for biota, being dominated by acidophilic organisms. The study site, São Domingos mine,
located in one of the largest metallogenetic provinces in the world, the Iberian Pyrite Belt, was
closed without preventive measures. To identify the algae species and understand the relationships
with abiotic parameters of the ecosystem, water and biological material were collected and analysed.
Digital terrain models were obtained with an unmanned aerial vehicle for geomorphological
and hydrologic characterisation of the mine degraded landscape. The results show two types of
algal colours that seem to represent different degrees of photosynthetic activity. Optical and scanning
electron microscopy revealed 14 taxa at the genus level, divided into eight classes. The genus
Mougeotia is the most abundant multicellular algae. With respect to unicellular algae, diatoms are
ubiquitous and abundant. Abiotic analyses expose typical features of acid mine drainage and
support an inverse relationship between chemical contamination and biological diversity. Factorial
correspondence analysis indicates three groups of attributes and samples by their relationship with
specific toxic elements. This analysis also suggests a close association between Spirogyra and Pb,
together composing a structurally simple ecosystem. The highest contamination in the river system
is related to the hydrologic patterns obtained from photogrammetric products, such as the digital
surface model and flow map accumulation, indicating the input of leachates from the section
having the finest sulfide-rich wastes. Information about the algae community and their association
with flow patterns of toxic elements is a relevant tool from a biomonitoring perspective.
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Access restrictions
openAccess
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Language
eng
Comments