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Benthos and zooplankton of coal strip mine ponds in the mountains of northwestern Colorado,U.S.A.
Authors:Steven P Canton  James V Ward
Institution:(1) Dept. of Zoology and Entomology Colorado State Univ. Fort Collins, 80523 Colorado, USA;(2) Present address: Harner-White Ecological Consultants, 4901 E. Dry Creek Rd., 80122 Littleton, CO, USA
Abstract:Zooplankton, benthos and associated physico-chemical conditions were sampled in coal strip-mine ponds in northwestern Colorado from June 1977 to May 1978. Two spoils ponds derived all of their drainage from the coal mine, but differed in age; one pond received only partial drainage from mine spoils; a control pond was located in an adjacent drainage basin. Acid mine drainage was not observed, although total dissolved solids (TDS), nitrate and sulfate values were higher in the spoils ponds than in the control pond. Net zooplankton were less abundant in the spoils ponds, although standing stock of benthos exhibited a progressive decrease from the youngest spoils pond to the control pond. Zooplankton and benthos species diversity values were lower in the ponds affected by mine drainage. Certain groups of zooplankters (Cladocera) and benthos (Trichoptera, Amphipoda, Hydracarina, and Sphaeriidae) were rare or absent in the youngest spoils pond. Percentage Similarity Coefficients indicate that colonization phenomena (age and distance from a source of colonizers) may be responsible, in part, for the faunal differences between ponds, since the higher levels of nitrate, sulfate, and TDS in the spoils ponds were generally within the tolerance range of aquatic organisms.
Keywords:coal mining  Colorado  macrobenthos  spoils ponds  zooplankton
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