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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Novel ecosystems created by coal mines in central Queensland’s Bowen Basin

Peter D. Erskine, +1 more
- 20 Dec 2013 - 
- Vol. 2, Iss: 1, pp 1-12
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TLDR
The authors examined post-mining rehabilitation from multiple soil and vegetation monitoring activities in the Bowen Basin to assess the similarity of landforms, plant composition, and trends in plant diversity compared to unmined reference communities.
Abstract
Open-cut coal mining began in central Queensland’s Bowen Basin approximately 50 years ago. Over this period of time, mine rehabilitators have used a variety of tree, shrub, and groundcover species to create ‘novel ecosystems’ to stabilise soils and provide vegetative cover for pre-supposed final end-land uses. We examine post-mining rehabilitation from multiple soil and vegetation monitoring activities in the Bowen Basin to assess the similarity of landforms, plant composition, and trends in plant diversity compared to unmined reference communities. Rehabilitated spoil dumps and reference sites were assessed using soil and vegetation data contained in compliance monitoring reports from Goonyella Riverside, Moura, Oaky Creek, Rolleston, and Blackwater mines. Slopes, soil chemistry, and plant species mixes of rehabilitation aged from 2 to 22 years were compared to selected reference communities. Mines in this region have generally proposed one of two post-rehabilitation end-land uses: either pasture for cattle grazing or reconstructed native communities which potentially provide native fauna habitat. Landform data from a selection of these mine sites suggest that when their rehabilitation was compared to nearby reference sites median slope values were between 2.5 and 7 times steeper and soil pH, electrical conductivity, and phosphorus levels were significantly higher. The steeply sloped landforms, poor soil characteristics, depauperate native species pool, and uniform presence of exotic pasture grasses in the rehabilitation indicate that most of these newly created ecosystems should not be used for cattle grazing and also have few natural values. Legislative and community expectations have changed progressively over time and, although much of the rehabilitation is currently dominated by an assemblage of exotic buffel grass (Cenchrus ciliaris) and Acacia spp., recent environmental authorities suggest these ‘novel ecosystems’ will be judged against native reference sites. Upon completion of mining activities the resilience of these new ecosystems to drought, fire, and grazing will need to be demonstrated prior to lease relinquishment.

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References
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Book ChapterDOI

An evaluation of the relative robustness of techniques for ecological ordination

TL;DR: In this article, simulated vegetation data were used to assess the relative robustness of ordination techniques to variations in the model of community variation in relation to environment, and the results clearly demonstrated the ineffectiveness of linear techniques (PCA, PCoA), due to curvilinear distortion.
Book

Principles and practices

TL;DR: Case Study Research: Principles and Practices aims to provide a general understanding of the case study method as well as specific tools for its successful implementation as mentioned in this paper, including the definition of a case study, the strengths and weaknesses of this distinctive method, strategies for choosing cases, and an experimental template for understanding research design.
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Management of novel ecosystems: are novel approaches required?

TL;DR: Few resources currently exist to support the addition of proactive measures and rigorous experimental designs to current management activities, so rapid information transfer and proactive research–management activities by the scientific community are needed.
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