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Section 1: Publication
Publication Type
Journal Article
Authorship
Savage, C. A. M, Owca, T., Kay, M. L., Faber, J., Wolfe, B. B., and Hall, R. I.
Title
Application of artificial substrate samplers to assess enrichment of metals of concern by river floodwaters to lakes across the Peace-Athabasca Delta
Year
2021
Publication Outlet
Journal of Hydrology: Regional Studies (Special Issue: Water and Environmental Management in Oil Sands Regions), 38, 100954
DOI
ISBN
ISSN
Citation
Savage, C. A. M, Owca, T., Kay, M. L., Faber, J., Wolfe, B. B., and Hall, R. I.: Application of artificial substrate samplers to assess enrichment of metals of concern by river floodwaters to lakes across the Peace-Athabasca Delta. Journal of Hydrology: Regional Studies (Special Issue: Water and Environmental Management in Oil Sands Regions), 38, 100954,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejrh.2021.100954, 2021
Abstract
Study region
Peace-Athabasca Delta (PAD), northeastern Alberta.
Study focus
Potential for downstream delivery of contaminants via Athabasca River floodwaters to lakes of the PAD has raised local to international concern. Here, we quantify enrichment of eight metals (Be, Cd, Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb, V, Zn) in aquatic biota, relative to sediment-based pre-industrial baselines, via analysis of biofilm-sediment mixtures accrued on artificial substrate samplers deployed during summers of 2017 and 2018 in > 40 lakes. Widespread flooding in the southern portion of the delta in spring 2018 allows for assessment of metal enrichment by Athabasca River floodwaters.
New hydrological insights
River floodwaters are not implicated as a pathway of metal enrichment to biofilm-sediment mixtures in PAD lakes from upstream sources. MANOVA tests revealed no significant difference in residual concentrations of all eight metals in lakes that did not flood versus lakes that flooded during one or both study years. Also, no enrichment was detected for concentrations of biologically inert metals (Be, Cr, Pb) and those related to oil-sands development (Ni, V). Enrichment of Cd, Cu, and Zn at non-flooded lakes, however, suggests uptake of biologically active metals complicates comparisons of organic-rich biofilm-sediment mixtures to sediment-derived baselines for these metals. Results demonstrate that this novel approach could be adopted for lake monitoring within the federal Action Plan.
Plain Language Summary
Section 2: Additional Information
Program Affiliations
Project Affiliations
Submitters
Publication Stage
Published
Theme
Presentation Format
Additional Information
Northern-Water-Futures, Refereed Publications