Mine waste disposal leads to lower coral cover, reduced species richness and a predominance of simple coral growth forms on a fringing coral reef in Papua New Guinea
A large gold mine has been operating at the Lihir Island Group, Papua New Guinea since 1997. The mine disposes of waste rock in nearshore waters, impacting nearby coral communities. During 2010, 2012 we conducted photographic surveys at 73 sites within 40 km of the mine to document impacts of mining...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Marine environmental research 2016-04, Vol.115, p.36-48 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | A large gold mine has been operating at the Lihir Island Group, Papua New Guinea since 1997. The mine disposes of waste rock in nearshore waters, impacting nearby coral communities. During 2010, 2012 we conducted photographic surveys at 73 sites within 40 km of the mine to document impacts of mining operations on the hard coral communities. Coral communities close to the mine (∼2 km to the north and south of the mine) were depaurperate, but surprisingly, coral cover and community composition beyond this range appeared to be relatively similar, suggesting that the mine impacts were limited spatially. In particular, we found mining operations have resulted in a significant decrease in coral cover (4.4% 1.48 km from the disposal site c.f. 66.9% 10.36 km from the disposal site), decreased species richness and a predominance of less complex growth forms within ∼2 km to the north and south of the mine waste disposal site. In contrast to the two ‘snapshot’ surveys of corals performed in 2010 and 2012, long term data (1999–2012) based on visual estimates of coral cover suggested that impacts on coral communities may have been more extensive than this. With global pressures on the world's coral reefs increasing, it is vital that local, direct anthropogenic pressures are reduced, in order to help offset the impacts of climate change, disease and predation.
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•A gold mine in PNG produces very high levels of turbidity and sedimentation over a fringing coral reef.•This has resulted in low coral cover and species richness and a dominance of simple growth forms within ~ 2 km of the mine.•Further away from the mine coral cover has also been declining over time, although the impacts are less severe. |
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ISSN: | 0141-1136 1879-0291 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.marenvres.2016.02.003 |