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TitleCarbon dynamics food web structure & reclamation strategies in Athabasca oil sands wetlands (CFRAW) - overview and progress
Publication TypeConference Proceedings
Year of Publication2009
AuthorsCiborowski, J., Dixon D. G., Foote L., Liber K., & Smits J. E.
EditorsBurridge, L. E., Liber K., & Janz D. M.
Pagination50 pages
Date Published10/2008
Place PublishedSaskatoon, SK
Publication Languageeng
Keywordsecology, model, modeling, naphthenic acids, peat, UofA, UofS, wetlands
Abstract

Seven oil sand mining partners and 5 university labs have joined forces to study the effects of mine tailings and process waters on development, health and function of wetland communities formed in post-mining landscapes. The collaborative effort, know as the carbon dynamics, food web structure and reclamation strategies in Athabasca oil sands wetlands (CRFAW), aims to identify the materials and strategies most effective and economical in producing a functioning reclamation landscape. This presentation reported on part of the study that tested predictions about how quickly wetlands amended with reclamation materials approach the conditions of reference wetland systems. It provided a conceptual model of carbon pathways and budgets to assess how the allocation of carbon among compartments changes as newly formed wetlands mature in the boreal system. It was assumed that stockpiling constructed wetlands with peat or topsoil would accelerate succession and community development. Although the bitumen and the naphthenic acids found in constructed wetlands are initially toxic, they may serve as an alternate source of carbon once they degrade. This study also assessed the sources, biological uptake, pathways, and movement through the food web of materials used by the biota in constructed wetlands. Additional studies are examining how the productivity of new wetlands is maintained. Net ecosystem productivity is being monitored along with rates of organic carbon accumulation from microbial, algal, and macrophyte production, and influx of outside materials. The rates of leaf litter breakdown and microbial respiration are being compared to determine how constituents speed or slow food web processes of young and older wetlands. Carbon and nitrogen isotope values in food web compartments indicate which sources are incorporated into the food web as wetlands age. The values are used to determine how this influences community development, food web structure and complexity, and the productivity and health of fish, amphibians, and wetland birds.

Notes

IN: Proceedings of the 35th Annual Aquatic Toxicity Workshop October 5-8, 2008 Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. Liber K. D.M. Janz and L.E. Burridge (Eds.). Canadian Technical Report of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences No. 2841. pp. 50.

Locational Keywords

Athabasca Oil Sands Region (AOSR)

Active Link

http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/503029030

Group

OSEMB

Citation Key51765

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