4.7 Article

Effect of metal pollution from mining on litter decomposition in streams

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 296, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2021.118698

Keywords

Mining; Litter traits; C loss; Decomposition; Microorganisms; Stream

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31870598]
  2. Priority Research Program of the Chinese Acad-emy of Sciences [XDA19050400]
  3. Jiangsu Forestry Science and Technology Innovation and Promotion Project [LYKJ [2021] 16]
  4. Na-tional Key Research and Development Program of the Ministry of Sci-ence and Technology of China [2016YFD0600402]
  5. State Key Program of National Natural Science Foundation of China [31530007]

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Metal pollution from mining activities has direct and indirect effects on leaf litter decomposition in streams. The indirect effects through litter traits and decomposer community type are stronger than the direct effects.
Litter decomposition is critical to stream biogeochemical cycles. Metal pollution from past or present mining activities seriously threatens stream ecosystems. However, its effects on litter decomposition in streams remain unclear. A field litterbag experiment was conducted to determine the direct (i.e., via changes in stream water quality: a mine-affected vs. forest stream) and indirect (i.e., via changes in litter traits: polluted vs. non-polluted litter) effects of metal pollution from mining activities on leaf litter decomposition (total vs. microbial-driven) and the associated microbial activity and community composition in streams. Platanus acerifolia leaf litter collected from a polluted and a non-polluted site was enclosed in fine and coarse mesh bags and incubated in a mine-affected stream and a forest stream. The litter from the polluted site had a higher Pb, Zn, Cd, N, soluble sugar concentrations, specific leaf area and pH, and lower leaf toughness and lignin concentration than the litter from the non-polluted site. After incubation in situ, litter mass loss did not significantly differ between streams, but the mine-affected stream had a greater impact on total-driven decomposition rates than microbial-driven decomposition rates. Polluted litter had a significantly higher decomposition rate than non-polluted litter. The decomposition potential of polluted litter produces faster nutrient cycling and supports higher microbial colonization. Litter traits and decomposer community type modulate the influence of metal pollution on litter decomposition. The results suggest that the indirect effects of mining activities on litter decomposition were stronger than the direct effects.

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