A global rise in alluvial mining increases sediment load in tropical rivers.
Evan N DethierMiles SilmanJimena Díaz LeivaSarra AlqahtaniLuis E FernandezPaúl PaucaSeda ÇamalanPeter TomhaveFrancis J MagilliganCarl E RenshawDavid A LutzPublished in: Nature (2023)
Increasing gold and mineral mining activity in rivers across the global tropics has degraded ecosystems and threatened human health 1,2 . Such river mineral mining involves intensive excavation and sediment processing in river corridors, altering river form and releasing excess sediment downstream 2 . Increased suspended sediment loads can reduce water clarity and cause siltation to levels that may result in disease and mortality in fish 3,4 , poor water quality 5 and damage to human infrastructure 6 . Although river mining has been investigated at local scales, no global synthesis of its physical footprint and impacts on hydrologic systems exists, leaving its full environmental consequences unknown. We assemble and analyse a 37-year satellite database showing pervasive, increasing river mineral mining worldwide. We identify 396 mining districts in 49 countries, concentrated in tropical waterways that are almost universally altered by mining-derived sediment. Of 173 mining-affected rivers, 80% have suspended sediment concentrations (SSCs) more than double pre-mining levels. In 30 countries in which mining affects large (>50 m wide) rivers, 23 ± 19% of large river length is altered by mining-derived sediment, a globe-spanning effect representing 35,000 river kilometres, 6% (±1% s.e.) of all large tropical river reaches. Our findings highlight the ubiquity and intensity of mining-associated degradation in tropical river systems.