Retrospective assessment of mine impacts: a case study using palaeoecology, aerial photography and maps from North Stradbroke Island (Minjerribah), Australia.

Autor: Tibby, John, Marshall, Jonathan C., Short, Julia, Cadd, Haidee R., Hansen, James, Lewis, Tara M., Schulz, Cameron, Negus, Peter M., McGregor, Glenn B., Donnellan, Courtney
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Zdroj: Australasian Journal of Environmental Management; Sep2024, Vol. 31 Issue 3, p310-338, 29p
Abstrakt: Mining is an environmentally destructive human activity. Consequently, community expectations and legislation require minimisation of impacts and rehabilitation once mining ceases. Rehabilitation standards now include restoration of structural and functional attributes of pre-disturbed landscapes. However, insufficient baseline data before, and during, mining often makes it difficult to assess impacts and develop rehabilitation objectives. Techniques that retrospectively document the pre-impact condition and environmental history of wetlands affected by mines can provide this information. We demonstrate how this can be achieved using data from palaeoecology and remote sensing, to understand mine impact on Fishermans Wetland, North Stradbroke Island (Minjerribah), by inferring its environmental history from formation to present. Fishermans Wetland is a small, clear, open water, wetland with extensive macrophyte growth. A lack of information about the wetland's pre-mine condition created uncertainty about the effects of upstream sand mining. Contrary to local community concerns that Fishermans Wetland was ancient and hydrologically modified by mining, it only formed in the 1950s. Moreover, changes to site hydrology predated mining. Consequently, ongoing supplementation of water is unnecessary for maintaining the wetland's ecological character. Similar techniques could be used elsewhere where mine impacts are poorly understood or contested. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index