Rangeland Ecology & Management

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Impacts of mine dump pollution on plant species diversity, composition and structure of a semiarid savanna in Namibia
Author
Mapaure, I
Chimwamurombe, P M
Mapani, B S
Kamona, F A
Publisher
African Journal of Range & Forage Science
Publication Year
2011
Body

Effects of mine dump pollution on semiarid savanna vegetation were investigated in Kombat, Namibia. Vegetation structure, species richness, composition and diversity were compared between polluted and control sites. Concentrations of arsenic, chromium, copper, lead and zinc in soils were significantly higher closer to a 99-year-old mine dump than in a control site and exceeded internationally recommended guidelines by as high as 11 times. Mine dump pollution has significantly reduced woody plant densities, species richness and diversity in the affected area due to disappearance of pollution-sensitive species and preponderance of tolerant ones. Species composition and structure of vegetation close to the mine dump significantly changed, possibly due to negative impacts of heavy metals on recruitment as pollution-sensitive species died off, whereas tolerant species invaded the vacated ecological niches. Ordination analyses confirmed a strong pollution gradient, with measured heavy metals accounting for 57.3% of the observed variation in species data, suggesting that other factors are also important determinants in the area. It is recommended that the mine dump and its surrounds should be rehabilitated and regular monitoring should be carried out to remedy the situation and arrest further pollution of the surrounding environment.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
28
Journal Number
3
Journal Pages
149-154
Journal Name
African Journal of Range & Forage Science
Keywords
heavy metals
Kombat
ordination
vegetation
pollution
savanna
mining
mine dump
species richness
species diversity
toxicity
decision support systems
Namibia
Africa