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Toxic and heavy metals as a cause of crayfish mass mortality from acidified headwater streams
Authors:Jitka Svobodová  Karel Douda  David Fischer  Natalia Lapšanská  Pavel Vlach
Institution:1.T.G. Masaryk Water Research Institute,Prague 6,Czech Republic;2.Department of Zoology and Fisheries, Faculty of Agrobiology Food and Natural Resources,Czech University of Life Sciences Prague,Prague,Czech Republic;3.Mining Museum P?íbram,P?íbram,Czech Republic;4.Povodí Vltavy, State Enterprise,Prague 5,Czech Republic;5.Centre of Biology, Geoscience and Environmental Education,Department of Education of the University of West Bohemia,Plzeň,Czech Republic
Abstract:Mining activities are responsible for high concentrations of metals in river networks in many parts of the world. Mining activities and the resulting high loads of heavy metals interact with intensive acid rain, and often have great consequences for biodiversity. However, considering the frequently episodic nature of these heavy acid rains, there is little detailed evidence of direct impacts. In 2011 we observed a massive mortality of noble crayfish and stone crayfish in Padr?sko Special Area of Conservation (SAC) in the Brdy Mountain region of the Czech Republic. Based on concentrations of metals (Al, Fe, As, Cd, Pb, Cu, Zn and Hg) in various tissues (gills, hepatopancreas, muscle) of both dead and live crayfish in this locality compared to reference populations, these crayfish had experienced long-term exposure to increased levels of these metals. Here we give detailed documentation of crayfish mortality associated with high metal concentrations in the gills and other tissues of these endangered invertebrates.
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