Document Type
Thesis
Abstract
Placer gold mining is an economically and politically important industry in Alaska which can have major impacts on the water quality of streams. To determine the effect of placer mining on benthic macroinvertebrates we determined water quality characteristics and sampled benthic invertebrates in nine hydrologicalIy similar and proximally located streams. Sampled streams ranged from unmined control streams to heavily mined streams. Placer mining caused increases in turbidity, settleable solids, percent substrate embeddedness, nonfilterable residue, and total recoverable arsenic, lead, zinc, and copper. Placer mining decreased invertebrate density and biomass. Substrate embeddedness and turbidity were the best predictive descriptors of reduced invertebrate density and biomass. Invertebrate communities in mined streams usually contained higher proportions of collector-gatherers, and lower proportions of crawlers, shredders, filter-feeders, predators, and oligochaetes compared to unmined streams.
Publication Date
12-17-1984
Recommended Citation
Wagener, Stephen Mitchell, "Effects of placer gold mining on stream macroinvertebrates of interior Alaska" (1984). Marine Biology. 272.
https://ualaska.researchcommons.org/uaf_marinebio_facpubs/272
Handle
http://hdl.handle.net/11122/14814