Impact of Pollution Caused by Uranium Production on Soil Macrofauna
Author: Gongalsky K.B.
Source: Environmental Monitoring and Assessment, Volume 89, Number 2, December 2003 , pp. 197-219(23)
Publisher: Springer
Abstract:
Thirty years of mining and milling activities of the Priargunsky Mining-Chemical Production Company (South-Eastern Siberia, Russia) have resulted in an enrichment of uranium in adjacent steppe soils by a factor of up to 600. A number of attendant pollutants (thorium, arsenic and heavy metals) also have high concentrations in the soil. To estimate the effects of this pollution on soil-living macroinvertebrates, pitfall trapping and core sampling were applied. The element composition of four beetle species was analysed. Soil macroinvertebrates had 337 times lower abundance and biodiversity at the contaminated sites compared with the control. Ground beetle communities at the contaminated sites were reduced compared to the control site. The concentrations of uranium and arsenic in beetles collected at the contaminated sites were 241 and 226 times higher, respectively, than at the control site. There is strong evidence that the contamination caused by uranium production has severe negative biological effects on important groups of the soil food web.
Keywords: accumulation; arsenic; Carabidae; heavy metals; macrofauna; soil; uranium
Language: English
Document Type: Research article
Affiliations: 1: A.N. Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, 33 Leninsky pr., Moscow, Russian Federation (e-mail: kocio@mail.ru)
Publication date: 2003-12-01
- In this: publication
- By this: publisher
- In this Subject: Ecology , Hydraulic & Environmental Engineering
- By this author: Gongalsky K.B.

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