4.7 Article

Impact of historical sulfide mine tailings discharge on meiofaunal assemblages (Portman Bay, Mediterranean Sea)

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 736, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.139641

Keywords

Historical metal contamination; Metal-rich mine tailings; Meiofauna; Nematode biodiversity; Portman Bay; Mediterranean Sea

Funding

  1. EU FP7MIDAS project [603418]
  2. H2020 MERCES project [689518]
  3. NUREIEVA project [CTM2016-75953-C2-1-R]
  4. Catalan Government Grups de Recerca Consolidats grant [2017 SGR 315]

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Portman Bay is one of the most contaminated and chronically impacted coastal marine areas of the world. Here, from the 1957 to 1990, about 60 million tons of mine tailings from the processing of sulfide ores were dumped directly at the shoreline. The resulting deposit provides a unique opportunity to assess the impact of mine tailings on coastal marine ecosystems after ca 30 years since the discharge has ceased. We investigated meiofaunal abundance, biomass and biodiversity along a gradient of metal concentration that overlaps with a bathymetric gradient from 30 to 60 m depth. Despite the localized presence of extremely high concentration of metals, the bay was not a biological desert, but, nevertheless, was characterized by evident signs of impact on benthic diversity. Meiofaunal variables increased significantly with decreasing metal contamination, eventually reaching values comparable to other uncontaminated coastal sediments. Our results show that mine tailings influenced the spatial distribution of meiofaunal taxa and nematode species composition. In particular, we report here that the bay was characterized by the dominance of nematode opportunistic species tolerant to high metal concentration. The effects of mine tailing discharge on meiofaunal biodiversity and composition were still evident ca 30 years after the end of the mining activities. Overall, this study provides new insights on the potential impact of mine tailings disposal and metal contamination in coastal sediments, and, can also contribute to predict the potential long-term consequences of ever-expanding deep-sea mining industry on benthic environments. (c) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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