Abstract

We studied the technogenic impact of a diamond mining company on the content of metabolites in the needles of Larix gmelinii (Rupr.) Kuzen. The samples of larch needles were collected in the Arctic zone in the restricted area where the diamond mining company works. The studied sites are located in Anabarsky district of Yakutia (Russia). An activity of the diamond mining company did not have a significant impact on the characteristics of the forest stand. But at the same time, near the sorting and enriching plants of the diamond mining company, the concentrations of Si, Ca, Fe, Mn, Al, Na, Sr, Ba, Zn, Pb, Ni, V were higher in the needles of L. gmelinii than those in the control zone. The activity of the diamond mining industry resulted in: intensification of the lipid peroxidation process, growth of a content of resin acids and amino acids, activation of cellular respiration processes, thickening of the cell wall, and a decline in the concentration of unsaturated fatty acids and antioxidants. We have concluded that some observable biochemical changes occur in the trees as a resulting effect of adaptive processes to the technogenic load despite the absence of significant changes in the forest stand.

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