TY - JOUR
T1 - Mining tailings severely impact plant communities in a rainforest watershed
AU - Fernandes, Wilson
AU - Ramos, Letícia
AU - de Souza Justino, Wénita
AU - Kenedy-Siqueira, Walisson
AU - Figueiredo, João Carlos Gomes
AU - Oki, Yumi
AU - Goulart, Fernando Figueiredo
AU - dos Santos, Rubens Manoel
AU - Viana, João Herbert Moreira
AU - Nunes, Yule Roberta Ferreira
AU - Aguilar, Ramiro
AU - Poorter, Lourens
AU - van der Sande, Masha
AU - Negreiros, Daniel
PY - 2025/3
Y1 - 2025/3
N2 - The collapse of a mining tailings dam in 2015 drastically affected a large area of an already threatened Atlantic Forest along the Rio Doce in Brazil. We evaluated the interactions between edaphic and floristic factors in impacted and reference sites to understand how the impact of the tailings affected the riparian plant communities along the river. The species richness of the adult and sapling strata was, respectively, 46.4 % and 61.5 % lower in the impacted sites relative to the reference sites. A similar pattern was observed for both species and phylogenetic diversity. We also recorded large changes in species composition in the adult and sapling strata in impacted sites relative to the reference sites along the river. These negative changes in the plant community were correlated with drastic increases in soil iron and phosphorus concentration, and fine sand proportion, and decreases in the proportion of carbon and coarse sand in the sites impacted by the mining tailings. We observed a close relationship between plant composition in both the adult and sapling strata with edaphic factors. The alterations in species composition triggered by the deposition of mining tailings may induce significant shifts in ecosystems, potentially prompting numerous tipping points throughout the river basin, as indicated by the different sapling species, some of which are invasive species of highly difficult eradication. These altered forests might suffer from impoverishment, dominated by a limited species set, some of which could expand its distribution upon neighboring, already threatened, regions. Such expansion could exacerbate the degradation of the Rio Doce watershed to a point of no return to the previous condition.
AB - The collapse of a mining tailings dam in 2015 drastically affected a large area of an already threatened Atlantic Forest along the Rio Doce in Brazil. We evaluated the interactions between edaphic and floristic factors in impacted and reference sites to understand how the impact of the tailings affected the riparian plant communities along the river. The species richness of the adult and sapling strata was, respectively, 46.4 % and 61.5 % lower in the impacted sites relative to the reference sites. A similar pattern was observed for both species and phylogenetic diversity. We also recorded large changes in species composition in the adult and sapling strata in impacted sites relative to the reference sites along the river. These negative changes in the plant community were correlated with drastic increases in soil iron and phosphorus concentration, and fine sand proportion, and decreases in the proportion of carbon and coarse sand in the sites impacted by the mining tailings. We observed a close relationship between plant composition in both the adult and sapling strata with edaphic factors. The alterations in species composition triggered by the deposition of mining tailings may induce significant shifts in ecosystems, potentially prompting numerous tipping points throughout the river basin, as indicated by the different sapling species, some of which are invasive species of highly difficult eradication. These altered forests might suffer from impoverishment, dominated by a limited species set, some of which could expand its distribution upon neighboring, already threatened, regions. Such expansion could exacerbate the degradation of the Rio Doce watershed to a point of no return to the previous condition.
KW - Ecological restoration
KW - Mining tailings
KW - Reference ecosystems
KW - Rio Doce watershed
KW - Samarco dam breach
KW - Soil-vegetation relationship
U2 - 10.1016/j.ancene.2025.100462
DO - 10.1016/j.ancene.2025.100462
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85215995488
SN - 2213-3054
VL - 49
JO - Anthropocene
JF - Anthropocene
M1 - 100462
ER -