Abstract

Surface mine operators in the Athabasca Oil Sands Region (AOSR) of northeastern Alberta are required by regulation to mitigate habitat impacts resulting from their operations, including impacts to wetlands. To date, most land reclamation efforts have focused on recreating upland forestlands that resemble the surrounding natural (dry) boreal forest. However, the surficial conditions on these reclaimed upland sites can also promote spontaneous wetland development. At Suncor’s Base Plant mine, opportunistic wetlands occurring on reclamation sites have not been formally included in the current inventory of reclaimed wetland areas and remain largely unquantified. We characterized and delineated an estimated 210 ha of opportunistic wetlands (consisting of shallow open water, marshes, and swamps) using aerial photo interpretation and remote sensing analysis in combination with follow-up field verifications. The remote-based (desktop) delineations consistently underestimated actual wetland extents, due mainly to underestimations in the extent of non-inundated vegetation zones (e.g., wet meadow) as well as shrubby swamp. After field corrections, opportunistic wetland habitat was estimated to constitute ~ 17% of the total study area (1209 ha), representing more than a fourfold increase in aerial wetland extent associated with reclaimed landforms over that delineated prior to this study. The interspersion of opportunistic wetlands with upland reclaimed landforms, although unintended, more closely reflects the pre-disturbance landscape, which was characterized by a matrix of forestlands, peatlands, and mineral wetlands (in contrast to the more peatland-dominated lowlands). At Suncor, wetland vegetation composition varied significantly across the study area and was influenced by topographic variation (e.g., in elevation and % slope) in combination with the reclamation substrates (soils) that were placed prior to seeding/planting. Thus, the inclusion of opportunistic wetland delineation in reclamation tracking and closure planning merits consideration as does the opportunity to manipulate current reclamation practices to promote the establishment and persistence of wetlands on reclaimed landforms.

Highlights

  • The development of the Athabasca Oil Sands Region (AOSR) in northeastern Alberta brings large-scale and long-term anthropogenic disturbances that alter the mosaic of peatland–forest–mineral wetland complexes common in the Boreal Plains (Vitt and Chee 1989; Nwaishi et al 2015a, b; Volik et al 2020)

  • Remote imaging can be an effective tool for identifying instances of opportunistic wetland formation on reclaimed upland landforms in the Athabasca Oil Sands Region, but additional field truthing will probably be needed to accurately delimit the extents of individual wetland complexes

  • Even when ground surveys are used, deriving precise wetland coverage estimates for a single large reclamation area can be challenging due to both the complexity of the terrain at the micro-scale and the large aerial extents occupied by certain wetland classes such as shrubby swamp

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Summary

Introduction

The development of the Athabasca Oil Sands Region (AOSR) in northeastern Alberta brings large-scale and long-term anthropogenic disturbances that alter the mosaic of peatland–forest–mineral wetland complexes common in the Boreal Plains (Vitt and Chee 1989; Nwaishi et al 2015a, b; Volik et al 2020). Between 1980 and 2017, the total land area impacted by surface mining and in-situ activities in the Lower Athabasca region of Alberta increased from 290 to 895 km (Government of Alberta 2017a). Within this forest–wetland mosaic, peatland wetlands (e.g., wooded and shrubby fens) are dominant upon the landscape, comprising up to 62% of the surface minable oil sands area, with mineral wetlands (e.g., shallow open water, marshes) constituting another 3% of the surface minable area (Raine et al 2002). Reclamation regulations require oil sands operators to return disturbed lands to ‘‘equivalent land capability,’’ a portion of which will be reclaimed to wetland ecosystems (Government of Alberta 2017b)

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