Trends in sedimentary Cladocera and metal(loid)s from Williams Lake (Washington, USA) track ∼125 years of trans-boundary contamination from smelter emissions in the upper Columbia River valley
- DOI
- Language of the publication
- English
- Date
- 2024-11-25
- Type
- Article
- Author(s)
- Would, Jamie A.
- Rühland, Kathleen M.
- Simmatis, Brigitte
- Evans, Marlene S.
- Meyer-Jacob, Carsten
- Smol, John P.
- Publisher
- Elsevier
Alternative title
Les tendances des cladocères sédimentaires et des métaux (loïdes) du lac Williams (Washington, États-Unis) retracent quelque 125 ans de contamination transfrontalière par les émissions des fonderies dans la vallée supérieure du fleuve Columbia
Abstract
The lead‑zinc smelter at Trail (British Columbia, Canada) has operated continuously for ∼125 years, with long-standing concerns that transboundary metal(loid) and sulphur emissions have contaminated water bodies in both western Canada and Washington (WA), USA. To assess aquatic ecosystems affected by over a century of industrial contamination requires an understanding of pre-smelting conditions. Here, we use a dated sediment core from Williams Lake (WA), downwind of both the Trail and the short-lived LeRoi (Northport, WA) smelters, to track regional contaminant history and other environmental stressors. Specifically, we examine a selection of chemical elements, cladoceran assemblages, visible range spectroscopy-inferred chlorophyll a (VRS-Chl a) and visible near-infrared spectroscopy-inferred lake-water total organic carbon (VNIRS-TOC). Sedimentary proxies recorded the onset of smelting in 1896 CE, peak periods of aerial emissions in the early to mid-20th century, and the history of emission controls. With a few exceptions, sedimentary metal(loid)s exceeded Canadian Interim Sediment Quality Guidelines during the height of the smelting era and have declined substantially since ca. 2000 CE. The loss of metal-sensitive Cladocera and declines in primary production (VRS-Chl a) at the onset of the regional smelting era indicate a strong biological response to airborne industrial contamination. The largest cladoceran change in the sediment record was concurrent with accelerated mitigation efforts at the Trail facilities following the 1960s; however, this compositional shift was between ecologically similar daphniid taxa. Steep declines in VNIRS-TOC concentrations during the period of peak emissions at Trail suggested an increase in sulphur deposition on the landscape that reduced terrestrial carbon supply. However, the persistence of calcium-sensitive daphniids throughout the record indicates that alkaline Williams Lake had not acidified. Current cladoceran assemblages remain substantially distinct from pre-industrial communities, demonstrating how paleoecotoxicological approaches can be used to track the effects of multiple stressors in a temporally appropriate context.
Subject
- Nature and environment,
- Science and technology
Rights
Pagination
14 pages
Peer review
Yes
Open access level
Gold
Identifiers
- ISSN
-
1879-1026
- 0048-9697
Article
- Journal title
- Science of The Total Environment
- Journal volume
- 953
- Article number
- 175816
- Accepted date
- 2024-08-24
- Submitted date
- 2024-04-19