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New database to help mines track impact.


New environmental regulations requiring Canadian mines to monitor the downstream effects of their effluent have prompted Laurentian University Laurentian University, main campus at Sudbury, Ont., Canada; bilingual, coeducational; founded 1960. Among its faculties are those in astronomy, commerce, computer science, education, engineering, law, mathematics, music, native studies, nursing, physics, and social  researchers and a number of partners to produce an online reference database.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The university's Cooperative Freshwater Ecology Unit is working with major miners Inco, Placer Dome Placer Dome was a large mining company specializing in gold and other precious metals, with corporate headquarters in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

Barrick has acquired 100% of the Placer Dome shares on January 20, 2006, and has integrated the company into its own.
, Goldcorp, Newmont Canada and Williams Operating Corporation to produce some new biological benchmarks in assessing the health of aquatic species in Northern lakes and rivers.

Researchers have developed models to assess the impact of mining discharges by monitoring the health of benthic ben·thos  
n.
1. The collection of organisms living on or in sea or lake bottoms.

2. The bottom of a sea or lake.



[Greek.
 invertebrate invertebrate (ĭn'vûr`təbrət, –brāt'), any animal lacking a backbone. The invertebrates include the tunicates and lancelets of phylum Chordata, as well as all animal phyla other than Chordata.  species that feed on the bottom of lakes and rivers.

The study, now entering its third year, was prompted by changes to the federal Fisheries Act and new monitoring requirements on mining operation discharges.

As a collaborative effort of regulators, industry and scientists, the study is establishing what's considered the "normal range of variability" in fresh water invertebrate communities, says Bill Keller
This article is about the New York Times editor. For the basketball player, see Billy Keller. For the televangelist, see Live Prayer.


Bill Keller (born January 18, 1949) is executive editor of The New York Times.
, a senior research scientist at Laurentian.

The intent of this bio-monitoring network is to help industry with their environmental reporting requirements.

Keller says before the revisions to the Fisheries Act were made, mining companies were only required to monitor what was coming out of their discharge pipes. The new legislation package places the onus on miners to monitor the downstream effects of effluent as well.

Monitoring invertebrates, such as crayfish crayfish or crawfish, freshwater crustacean smaller than but structurally very similar to its marine relative the lobster, and found in ponds and streams in most parts of the world except Africa. Crayfish grow some 3 to 4 in. (7.6–10.  and other crustaceans, gives a more reliable standard to measure the effects of industrial impacts on the environment.

The classical approach to assess discharges is to take upstream and downstream water samples to determine that effect. "The problem is, it doesn't always work, or isn't always possible," says Keller.

Bottom dwellers, he says, are a broad and diverse group with "different preferences and tolerances to different types of habitat and environmental conditions."

Unlike taking the occasional water sample, benthic invertebrates remain year-round in an area, giving a good indication of long-term conditions.

"By looking at how those communities change, it tells you a lot about how the environment might be changing."

In a collaborative effort with the mining companies, Acadia University Acadia University, at Wolfville, N.S., Canada; founded 1838; became Acadia Univ. 1891. It has faculties of arts, pure and applied sciences, management and education, and theology. Acadia Divinity College is associated with the university. , and government regulators including Environment Canada Environment Canada (EC), legally incorporated as the Department of the Environment under the Department of the Environment Act ( R.S., 1985, c. E-10 ), is the department of the Government of Canada with responsibility for coordinating environmental policies and , Ontario Ministry of Environment and the National Water Research Institute, they have been developing standards for several mining regions across the North.

"If you have a site you're interested in, you can evaluate the community there and see how it measures up against what we consider natural or more normal."

During the study's first two years, Laurentian researchers have sampled 400 sites near mining operations in Red Lake, Marathon, Timmins and Sudbury to build their models.

"The idea was to get sites from across Northern Ontario that were representative (of the whole)," says Keller, from fast-flowing streams with rocky bottoms to marshy marsh·y  
adj. marsh·i·er, marsh·i·est
1. Of, resembling, or characterized by a marsh or marshes; boggy.

2. Growing in marshes.
, shallow streams, and lakes.

By using the environmental conditions and habitat characteristics of a particular site, it can be plugged into a model and compared to appropriate reference sites.

Since the first phase of research began in 2003, researchers have set up a database of reference sites.

Keller say they are very close to having system in place that mining companies can use to help prepare their environmental monitoring reports to federal regulators.

He hopes with more industry and government involvement to sample more sites and create similar models for other sectors such as for forestry and municipal use.

The site data will be accessible via a web-operated system as part of Environment Canada's Benthic Invertebrate Reference Condition (BIRC BIRC Bio-Integral Resource Center
BIRC Bioinformatics Research Centre
) system.

"Partners and users will be able to go in and do this on line," says Keller. They expect to have the system operational this winter.

LU's freshwater unit has garnered an international reputation for its work in aquatic ecology on Canadian lakes damaged by acid rain and in assessing industrially damaged ecosystems. Their work in developing an online reference of data base, figures to be among the key areas of research for Laurentian University's proposed $30 million Centre of Excellence in Mining Innovation (CEMI CEMI Center for Experimental Music and Intermedia (University of North Texas, Denton, TX)
CEMI Communications-Electronics Maintenance Instruction
).

http://coopunit.laurentian.ca

By IAN ROSS

Northern Ontario Business Northern Ontario Business is a Canadian magazine, which publishes monthly in Greater Sudbury, Ontario. The magazine covers business news and issues in Northern Ontario.  
COPYRIGHT 2006 Laurentian Business Publishing, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Ross, Ian
Publication:Northern Ontario Business
Geographic Code:1CANA
Date:Jan 1, 2006
Words:664
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