Regulation of the Pollutants Content in Surface Waters under the Influence of Mining and Smelting Complex, Using Water Ecosystems Links

2017 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 30-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
V.A. Pochechun ◽  
M.V. Arkhipov ◽  
V.V. Kuchin
2014 ◽  
Vol 16 (02) ◽  
pp. 1450010 ◽  
Author(s):  
ANA CECI MOTA ◽  
EMILIO LÈBRE LA ROVERE ◽  
ALBERTO FONSECA

Historical records of socio-environmental impacts related to large-scale iron ore development in Brazil are driving different planning approaches in the burgeoning iron mining and smelting complex of Corumbá, located at the border of the Pantanal ecosystem in the Brazilian state of Mato Grosso do Sul. Among the most relevant efforts are two strategic environmental assessments (SEA): one was led by a mining company and the other by a civil society committee. This paper assesses to what extent these SEAs can contribute to the mitigation of negative socio-environmental impacts of the Corumbá Complex. It also evaluates if the SEA methodologies meet a number of SEA Performance Criteria. The analyses, which were based on literature reviews and content analysis of the SEA documents, reveal that the two SEAs represent an important effort to incorporate environmental variables into more strategic levels of the Pantanal region's planning. Nonetheless, both SEAs have serious limitations, given that they are not formally nested in governmental policies, plans and programmes.


Geoderma ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 352 ◽  
pp. 241-250 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marija Egerić ◽  
Ivana Smičiklas ◽  
Biljana Dojčinović ◽  
Biljana Sikirić ◽  
Mihajlo Jović ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rafał M. Olszyński ◽  
Ewelina Szczepocka ◽  
Joanna Żelazna-Wieczorek

Background. The ecological state of surface waters is typically assessed by a multi-aspect approach based on a determination of its chemical and physical parameters by hydromorphology and the use of indicator organisms such as benthic diatoms. By assigning ecological indicator values (EIV), it is possible to create diatom indexes which serve as the basic tool in assessing the ecological status of surface waters. These ecological indicator values are set according to classification systems, such as the Van Dam et al. system, which classifies species of diatoms according to seven different ecological factors. However, recent studies on the autecology of diatoms have shown the need to verify and establish new ecological indicator values. To this end, water ecosystems are good environments to observe the range of tolerance of benthic diatoms to environmental conditions due to their unique physical and chemical parameters. The aim of the present study was to propose the establishment of new, or changed, ecological indicator values, according to Van Dam et al., of species of diatoms characteristic of three post-mining aquatic ecosystems Methods. In total, 36 species were identified that were characteristic of three water ecosystems: a salt water complex, a mined iron ore reservoir and a mined lignite reservoir. Their ecological indicator values were calculated using OMNIDIA software, and the environmental conditions prevailing in the studied ecosystems were determined. Of the 36 characteristic species, 16 lacking at least one assigned ecological indicator value were analysed further. The analysis identified three groups of selected characteristic species which showed a correlation, or lack of such, to the tested physical and chemical parameters. Results. Based on this multistage study of the autecology of characteristic diatoms, comprising an analysis of environmental conditions, literature analysis and reference indicator values of other species, it is proposed that 32 ecological indicator values be established or adjusted for 16 species, and that Planothidium frequentissimum be excluded from water quality assessments.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Morgan G. Blevins

Global temperature rise and increased atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) levels have affected the health of the world’s ocean and water ecosystems, impacting the balances of natural carbon cycling and causing ocean acidification. Additionally, as global temperatures rise, thawing permafrost has stimulated increased release of methane (CH4), a gas with a shorter lifetime in the atmosphere but with even more heat trapping ability than CO2. In situ analysis of dissolved gas content in surface waters is currently performed with large, expensive instruments, such as spectrometers, which are coupled with gas equilibration systems, which extract dissolved gas from water and feed it to the sensor. Accurate, low cost, and portable sensors are needed to measure the dissolved CH4 and CO2 concentration in water systems to quantify their release and understand their relationship to the global carbon budget. At the same time, while greenhouse gases are well established threats to water ecosystems, the ubiquity and potential consequences of microplastics in aqueous environments are just beginning to be recognized by the environmental research community. Microplastics (MPs) are small particles of polymer debris, commonly defined as being between 1 μm and 1000 μm. Despite the pervasiveness of MPs, our ability to characterize MPs in the environment is limited by the lack of technologies for rapidly and accurately identifying and quantifying MPs. This thesis is concerned with the engineering challenges prompted by the need for high quality and quantity environmental data to better study and the impact, cycling, and prevalence of these pollutants in aqueous environments. Three distinct investigations are presented here. First, the design of the Low-Cost Gas Extraction and Measurement System (LC-GEMS) for dissolved CO2 is presented. At just under $600 dollar to build, the LC-GEMS is an ultra-portable, toolbox-sized instrument for dissolved gas sensing in near-surface waters. The LCGEMS was characterized in the lab and demonstrated linear relationships with dissolved CO2 as well as temperature. Lab calibrations and subsequent field testing in the Little Sippewissett Marsh, in Falmouth, Massachusetts showed that the LCGEMS captures both diurnal and minute-time scale trends in dissolved CO2. Second, this thesis presents the novel design of three simple and low-cost planar nanophotonic and plasmonic structures as optical transducers for measuring dissolved CH4. Through simulations, the sensitivity of the structures are evaluated and found to exhibit superior performance in the reflectance intensity readout mode to that of the standard surface-plasmon-polariton-mode Spreeta sensor. A practical, small, and low-cost implementation of this chip with a simple intensity-based measurement scheme is proposed. This design is novel in the space of dissolved gas monitoring because it shows potential to measure directly in the water phase while being robust and low-cost to implement. Finally, this thesis presents a literature review and perspective to motivate the development of field-deployable microplastic sensing techniques. A framework for field-deployable microplastic sensing is presented and seeks to inform the MP community of the potential in both traditional MP analysis techniques and unconventional methods for creating rapid and automated MP sensors. The field-deployabilty framework addresses a full scope of practical/technological trade-offs to be considered for portable MP detection.


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