Consistent declines in aquatic biodiversity across diverse domains of life in rivers impacted by surface coal mining.
Abstract
The rivers of Appalachia (USA) are among the most biologically diverse freshwater
ecosystems in the temperate zone and are home to numerous endemic aquatic organisms.
Throughout the Central Appalachian ecoregion, extensive surface coal mines generate
alkaline mine drainage that raises the pH, salinity and trace element concentrations
in downstream waters. Previous regional assessments have found significant declines
in stream macroinvertebrate and fish communities draining these mined areas. Here,
we expand these assessments with a more comprehensive evaluation across a broad range
of organisms (bacteria, algae, macro-invertebrates, all eukaryotes, and fish) using
high-throughput amplicon sequencing of environmental DNA (eDNA). We collected water
samples from 93 streams in Central Appalachia (West Virginia, USA) spanning a gradient
of mountaintop coal mining intensity and legacy to assess how this land use alters
downstream water chemistry and affects aquatic biodiversity. For each group of organisms,
we identified the sensitive and tolerant taxa along the gradient and calculated stream
specific conductivity thresholds in which large synchronous declines in diversity
were observed. Streams below mining operations had steep declines in diversity (-18
to -41%) and substantial shifts in community composition that were consistent across
multiple taxonomic groups. Overall, large synchronous declines in bacterial, algal,
and macroinvertebrate communities occurred even at low levels of mining impact at
stream specific conductivity thresholds of 150 to 200 µS·cm-1 that are substantially
below the current EPA Aquatic Life Benchmark of 300 µS·cm-1 for Central Appalachian
streams. We show that extensive coal surface mining activities led to the extirpation
of 40% of biodiversity from impacted rivers throughout the region and that current
water quality criteria are likely not protective for many groups of aquatic organisms.
Type
Journal articleSubject
Biodiversity lossBiomonitoring
Community thresholds
Freshwater
Indicator species
Mountaintop mining
Stream specific conductivity
Surface coal mining
Water quality criteria
eDNA
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23405Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1002/eap.2389Publication Info
Simonin, Marie; Rocca, Jennifer D; Gerson, Jacqueline R; Moore, Eric; Brooks, Alexander
C; Czaplicki, Lauren; ... Bernhardt, Emily S (2021). Consistent declines in aquatic biodiversity across diverse domains of life in rivers
impacted by surface coal mining. Ecol Appl. pp. e2389. 10.1002/eap.2389. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23405.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Emily S. Bernhardt
James B. Duke Distinguished Professor
Emily Bernhardt is an ecosystem ecologist and biogeochemist whose research is principally
concerned with tracking the movement of elements through ecological systems. Dr. Bernhardt's
research aims to document the extent to which the structure and function of aquatic
ecosystems is being altered by land use change (urbanization, agriculture, mining)
global change (rising CO2, rising sea levels) and chemical pollution. Ultimately this
information is necessary to determine whether and how

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