Long-term sediment records reveal over three thousand years of heavy metal inputs in the Mar Menor coastal lagoon (SE Spain)

The Mar Menor lagoon combined high biological production and environmental quality, making it an important economic engine. However, the pressure of human activities put its ecological integrity at risk, the oldest environmental impact being mining activity recorded since Roman times, about 3500 yea...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2023-12, Vol.902, p.166417-166417, Article 166417
Hauptverfasser: Pérez-Ruzafa, Angel, Dezileau, Laurent, Martínez-Sánchez, María José, Pérez-Sirvent, Carmen, Pérez-Marcos, María, von Grafenstein, Ulrich, Marcos, Concepción
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The Mar Menor lagoon combined high biological production and environmental quality, making it an important economic engine. However, the pressure of human activities put its ecological integrity at risk, the oldest environmental impact being mining activity recorded since Roman times, about 3500 years ago, reaching its maximum intensity in the 20th century, contributing heavy metals to the lagoon sediments for almost 30 centuries. This work reviews the spatiotemporal evolution of the main heavy metals in this coastal lagoon using data from 272 surface sediment samples obtained during the last 40 years and two deep cores covering the total history of the lagoon (c. 6500 yrs BP), so as their incidence in the lagoon trophic web. The observed patterns in sedimentation, sediment characteristics and heavy metal content respond to the complex interaction, sometimes synergistic and sometimes opposing, between climatic conditions, biological production and human activities, with mining being mainly responsible for Pb, Zn and Cd inputs and port activities for Cu. High Fe/Al, Ti/Al and Zr/Al ratios identify periods of mining activity, while periods of arid climatic conditions and deforestation that increase erosion processes in the drainage basin and silt concentration in the lagoon sediments are determined by high Zr/Rb and, to a lesser extent, Zr/Al and Si/Al ratios. After the cessation of direct discharges into the lagoon in the 1950s, the recent evolution of heavy metals concentration and its spatial redistribution would be determined by hydrographic and biogeochemical processes, solubility of different elements, and coastal works in harbours and on beaches. The bioconcentration factor decreases along the trophic levels of the food web, suggesting that the lagoon ecosystem provides an important service by retaining heavy metals in the sediment, largely preventing their bioavailability, but actions involving resuspension or changes in sediment conditions would pose a risk to organisms. [Display omitted] •Increase in sediments Pb and Zn, linked to mining, is detected as early as 1460 BCE.•Cu appears to be linked to nautical ports activity.•Eutrophication and macrophyte meadows dynamic may influence the metals mobility.•The relatively low bioconcentration factor suggests an important ecosystem service.•Inadequate beach management and dredging can increase the bioavailability of metals.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.166417