[PCA] ARTICLE: Native plants facilitate vegetation succession on amended and unamended mine tailings

Park, Margaret E margaret_park at fws.gov
Mon Oct 18 11:37:18 CDT 2021


Asma Asemaninejad et al., International Journal of Phytoremediation, October 14, 2021

Abstract:
Facilitating the establishment of native pioneer plant species on mine tailings with inherent metal and/or acid tolerance is important to speed up natural succession at minimal cost, especially in remote areas where phytoremediation can be labor intensive. We investigated vegetation community dynamics after ∼48 years of succession along two legacy Ni–Cu mine tailings and waste rock deposits in the Sudbury Basin, Ontario, Canada with and without various site amendments (i.e. liming and fertilization) and planting. Metal/acid tolerant pioneer plants (Betula papyrifera, Populus tremuloides, Pohlia nutans) appeared to facilitate the establishment of less tolerant species. Conifers and nitrogen-fixers less tolerant to site conditions were planted at the fully amended (limed, fertilized, planted) mine tailings site in the 1970s, but conifers were not propagating at the site or facilitating understory succession. The planted nitrogen-fixing leguminous species Lotus corniculatus was, however, associated with increased diversity. These findings have implications for long-term reclamation strategies in acidic mine waste deposits utilizing native species, as primary colonizing tree species are only recently emerging as candidates for phytoremediation.

Full Article: https://doi.org/10.1080/15226514.2021.1987382

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