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Impact of soil stockpiling and mining rehabilitation on earthworm communities
Authors:Stephane Boyer  Stephen Wratten  Mark Pizey  Paul Weber
Institution:1. Bio-Protection Research Centre, Lincoln University, PO Box 84, Lincoln 7647, New Zealand;2. Solid Energy New Zealand Limited, PO Box 1303, Christchurch 8140, New Zealand
Abstract:As key ‘ecosystem engineers’, earthworms improve mineralization of organic matter, plant growth, soil quality, and are an important component of many terrestrial food webs. Under appropriate conditions, they are therefore likely to accelerate the restoration of soil ecosystem function after mining.Conserving naturally occurring populations and facilitating their recolonisation appears as the most efficient way to increase earthworms’ overall effect. The impact of mining activities and restoration measures on New Zealand endemic earthworm communities was tested. Earthworm biomass and diversity were compared in four different habitat types.Mining activities, not surprisingly, are shown here to have a detrimental impact on earthworm communities. Soil stockpiling induces anaerobic conditions at and below a depth of 1 m, where earthworms do not survive. The use of stockpiled soil for vegetation replanting therefore leads to low diversity and low abundance of earthworms. An alternative restoration technique consisting in transferring vegetation and soil units (the vegetation direct transfer) was efficient in preserving earthworm populations with earthworm biomass and diversity not significantly different from those observed in undisturbed areas. Based on these results, we recommend vegetation direct transfer (VDT) to be prioritised whenever it is logistically and economically feasible. When VDT is not applicable, low stockpiles should be prioritised as they will comprise a higher proportion of good quality soil (at the surface) and a lower proportion of anaerobic and compacted soil (below 1 m depth at the studied site).
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