Aquatic1 life can suffer when high concentrations of dissolved salts enter freshwater
ecosystems3, a process known as salinization. An international, multi-institutional team of researchers that includes a Virginia Tech graduate student recommends ways that humans can protect freshwater from salts in an article Friday (Feb. 26) in the journal Science.
The recommendations include the use of less water for agricultural practices, less salt for road de-icing, less discharge or
sequestering4 salts during mining operations, and re-routing of urban salt discharges to
retention5 basins rather than treatment plants or streams.
"We've written the paper as a call to action, or at least a call to
awareness6, and we've tried to describe what we think will be an effective path forward," said Tony Timpano of Herndon, Virginia, a doctoral student in the Department of Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation in the College of Natural Resources and Environment.
Increased salinization in freshwaters is an issue that hasn't gotten much attention in terms of science policy, according to Timpano.
Dissolved salts and other minerals are naturally found in streams, but increased levels can be
toxic7 to aquatic
invertebrates8 that are an important
component9 of freshwater
ecosystem2 food webs. At extremely high levels, salt can kill fish and other organisms that humans rely on for food.
Since 2008, when he began a master's in environmental sciences and engineering at Virginia Tech, the focus of Timpano's research has been changes in biodiversity of the aquatic insect community as
salinity10 increases in Appalachian freshwater streams.
Of the two dozen streams that Timpano monitors, those located near coal mining operations have shown the highest salt concentrations and insect losses.
"I've been focusing on trying to understand the pattern of salinization through time because it does change
seasonally11, and then trying to understand that related to the diversity of stream insect communities," Timpano said. "These insect communities are currently being used as a bio-indicator of water body health for Clean Water Act
compliance12."