<p>The impacts of mining on aquatic biodiversity pose significant challenges for environmental mitigation, particularly near protected areas. This study assessed fish abundance and diversity (assemblage composition, alpha and beta diversity, indicator species, and Species Contribution to Beta Diversity – SCBD) in the Itacaiúnas and Parauapebas river basins, Brazilian Amazonia, across dry and rainy seasons. We hypothesized that basins near mining-impacted areas would exhibit reduced fish abundance and diversity compared to control areas. To test this, four sampling points were established per basin (two controls, two impacted), totaling eight sites, where fish were collected using gillnets and physicochemical water parameters were simultaneously recorded. Fish abundance and alpha diversity peaked during the rainy season but showed no significant differences between control and impacted areas. Beta diversity was higher in the Parauapebas basin, and indicator species analysis identified taxa associated with particular groups. A Redundancy Analysis (RDA) linked environmental variables (temperature, salinity, and conductivity) to species distributions, suggesting an influence of water quality on assemblage organization. Although abundance and richness did not clearly differentiate areas, the combined assemblage and species-level results support the importance of continuous, integrated monitoring to assess long-term ecological changes.</p>

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The use of fish diversity and abundance as environmental indicators in a mining region in Brazilian Amazonia

  • Claudia Antônia Campos Rodrigues de Oliveira,
  • Katherine Soares Morais,
  • João Paulo Silva de Oliveira,
  • Alexandre de Oliveira Marques,
  • Ana Beatriz Ferreira da Silva,
  • Dulcidéia da Conceição Palheta,
  • Bianca Bentes

摘要

The impacts of mining on aquatic biodiversity pose significant challenges for environmental mitigation, particularly near protected areas. This study assessed fish abundance and diversity (assemblage composition, alpha and beta diversity, indicator species, and Species Contribution to Beta Diversity – SCBD) in the Itacaiúnas and Parauapebas river basins, Brazilian Amazonia, across dry and rainy seasons. We hypothesized that basins near mining-impacted areas would exhibit reduced fish abundance and diversity compared to control areas. To test this, four sampling points were established per basin (two controls, two impacted), totaling eight sites, where fish were collected using gillnets and physicochemical water parameters were simultaneously recorded. Fish abundance and alpha diversity peaked during the rainy season but showed no significant differences between control and impacted areas. Beta diversity was higher in the Parauapebas basin, and indicator species analysis identified taxa associated with particular groups. A Redundancy Analysis (RDA) linked environmental variables (temperature, salinity, and conductivity) to species distributions, suggesting an influence of water quality on assemblage organization. Although abundance and richness did not clearly differentiate areas, the combined assemblage and species-level results support the importance of continuous, integrated monitoring to assess long-term ecological changes.