February 20, 2016, By Brian
Bienkowski , Environmental Health News
Tadpoles exposed to coal mine wastewater
in Queensland , Australia , had delayed development,
hyperactivity and ended up full of toxic metals in their tails and livers,
according to a new study.
The study, published in the Aquatic Toxicology journal
last month, is concerning as Queensland
is a major coal mining region. It comes amid increasing concern about amphibian
population declines throughout the world and adds to evidence that pollution
may play a key role.
“Amphibians are currently some of the
most threatened organisms on the planet,” said Central Queensland
University researchers
and co-authors Chantal Lanctôt and Steven Melvin in a joint emailed response.
Camouflaged in earthy colors, striped
marsh frogs live along the western half of Australia . Their call is an abrupt
pop, like a racquetball return. Frogs and other aquatic animals hang out in
wetlands near the holding dams where, during extreme rain or flooding,
discharges of the mine waste can escape into the environment.
For four weeks the researchers exposed
striped marsh frogs to 25, 50 or 100 percent coal mine wastewater from two dams
in Central Queensland, Australia—an area known for heavy coal mining. All
exposed tadpoles had hyperactivity, and elevated levels of selenium, cobalt and
arsenic in tails and liver tissue. Those exposed to 100 percent wastewater were
smaller as well.
None of the unexposed tadpoles died. But
in the groups exposed to 50 percent and 100 percent wastewater, 40 percent and
55 percent of the tadpoles died, respectively.
Coal mining wastewater contains metals,
hydrocarbons and salts that can impact the amphibians’ oxidative stress and
mess with their hormones, Lanctôt and Melvin said. “These can, in turn, result
in delayed development, altered swimming behavior, and even reduced survival.”
Striped marsh frog populations appear to
be stable. But the findings don’t bode well for amphibians.
Two main things are influenced by altered
swimming and activity—“foraging and predator avoidance,” said Christopher
Salice, an assistant professor and researcher at Towson University
who studies environmental impacts on amphibians.
“Acquiring resources and preventing them
from being a resource,” added Salice, who was not involved in the study.
The study had some limits—for example,
they only used one mass of eggs, which limits the genetic variability. The ones
used “could have been more sensitive or more resistant” to pollutants, Salice
said.
But there is a complex interplay of
factors affecting developing baby frogs, including species competition, habitat
loss and climate change. The recent striped marsh frog findings add to a
growing body of science that suggests coal waste might tip the balance, leading
to declines in certain areas.
For instance, researchers reported in 2014 that
Blacksmith tree frogs from coal mining areas in Brazil had elevated levels of
sulfur, chlorine, iron, zinc and bromine, and their antioxidant systems were
sensitive to the pollution.
And Southern leopard frogs and Southern
toads that emerged from areas contaminated with coal waste had concentrations
of arsenic, selenium and strontium up to 35 times higher than those from
unpolluted wetlands, according to a 2005 University of Georgia study.
The current research carries extra weight
because of where it was done—Queensland , which
sits on the northeast coast of Australia
and is a major coal mining region. The Australian government estimates there
are two deposits of coal in the area that are more than five billion tons, five
deposits between three and five billion tons and dozens more smaller deposits
dotting the region.
The Bowen
Basin in central Queensland has more than 50 active mines in
a 29,000 square mile area, according to the Queensland Government’s Department
of Natural Resources and Mines.
A survey released in December by 350.org of 1,500 people in Australia
found 68
percent of respondents agreed Australia "needs to restrict
coal mining because of the impact that it is having on our natural environment
and biodiversity."
The Minerals Council of Australia, which
oversees the country’s coal mines, did not respond to numerous requests for
comment.
Lanctôt and Melvin said “under normal
circumstances, wastewater releases will be carefully controlled and limited to
periods of high rainfall, as a means of reducing risks to wildlife” but added
that accidental releases can happen.
And the pollution can stay with the
creatures a lifetime, Salice said.
“Even if the initial effects of pollution
don’t last [in tadpoles], it still might be a signature of something else,” he
said. “Once they turn into terrestrial frogs everything that has happened to
them is carried with them.”
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