Abstract

Recently formed beaver-ponds surrounding an abandoned copper-nickel ore roast yard near Sudbury, Ontario, Canada, were influenced by highly acidic and heavy-metal contaminated effluent. Fish, including Culaea inconstans, Phoxinus neogaeus, Phoxinus eos, and Pimephales promelas, were found in the ponds upstream of the roast yard only. Macroinvertebrate taxon richness and diversity were greater in the upstream ponds than in the downstream ponds. Acid intolerant taxa, including Mollusca and Hyalella azteca, were found upstream only; acid tolerant taxa, including Enallagma and Ischnura (Odonata: Coenagrionidae) were found in the downstream ponds. One taxon, a species of Chironomus, was especially tolerant of both acid and metal stresses, and was the only invertebrate taxon found in the pond located directly on the roast yard itself. We conclude that long-abandoned mining and refining sites can continue to have a marked effect on aquatic communities.

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