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Effects of Metal Mining and Milling on Boundary Waters of Yellowstone National Park, USA
Authors:Delwayne R Nimmo  Mary J Willox  Toben D Lafrancois  Phillip L Chapman  Stephen F Brinkman  Joseph C Greene
Institution:(1) Biological Resources Division, US Geological Survey, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523, USA , US;(2) Department of Fishery and Wildlife Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523, USA , US;(3) Department of Entomology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523, USA , US;(4) Department of Statistics, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523, USA , US;(5) Colorado Division of Wildlife, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523, USA , US;(6) U S Environmental Protection Agency, Corvallis, Oregon 97331, USA , US
Abstract:/ Aquatic resources in Soda Butte Creek within Yellowstone National Park, USA, continue to be threatened by heavy metals from historical mining and milling activities that occurred upstream of the park's boundary. This includes the residue of gold, silver, and copper ore mining and processing in the early 1900s near Cooke City, Montana, just downstream of the creek's headwaters. Toxicity tests, using surrogate test species, and analyses of metals in water, sediments, and macroinvertebrate tissue were conducted from 1993 to 1995. Chronic toxicity to test species was greater in the spring than the fall and metal concentrations were elevated in the spring with copper exceeding water quality criteria in 1995. Tests with amphipods using pore water and whole sediment from the creek and copper concentrations in the tissue of macroinvertebrates and fish also suggest that copper is the metal of concern in the watershed. In order to understand current conditions in Soda Butte Creek, heavy metals, especially copper, must be considered important factors in the aquatic and riparian ecosystems within and along the creek extending into Yellowstone National Park.KEY WORDS: Mining; Metals; Toxicity; Biomonitoring; Copper; Yellowstone National Park
Keywords:: Mining  Metals  Toxicity  Biomonitoring  Copper  Yellowstone National Park
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