While heavy metals are found naturally in the environment, their increased concentrations in aquatic ecosystems can be extremely harmful to the organisms living in the water. Anthropogenic activities such as industrial processes, mining, and agriculture can lead to an increase in heavy metal concentrations in water bodies in addition to natural causes like geological breakdown of rocks and minerals. The seepage of metals from waste disposal sites and the use of metal-based compounds in agriculture also contribute significantly to this pollution.
Once introduced into aquatic environments, heavy metals like chromium, mercury, lead, cadmium, and arsenic prove to be highly toxic harming aquatic life, disrupting microbial ecosystems and causing physiological stress in plants and animals and includes chlorosis, impeded growth, reduced biomass production, and the generation of free radicals that damage plant and animals living in the water. These impacts highlight the need for a deeper understanding of heavy metal pollution in aquatic systems.
This paper titled 'The impact of heavy metal concentrations on aquatic insect populations in the Asan Wetland of Dehradun, Uttarakhand' published in Nature Scientific Reports discusses the findings of a study that looked at the impact of heavy metal pollution on the distribution and biodiversity of aquatic insects in the Asan Wetland of Dehradun, Uttarakhand. The research used data collected from three sites within the Asan Wetland in Dehradun, Uttarakhand.
Aquatic insects form an integral part of freshwater ecosystems and play critical roles in nutrient cycling, energy transfer, and maintaining food webs. They are highly sensitive to changes in water quality and are often used as bioindicators to detect environmental changes in water bodies.
The Asan wetland has been officially designated as the Asan Conservation Reserve following the construction of the barrage in 1967 at the confluence of the Asan River and the outlet channel of the Dhalipur power station. The wetland is made up of a dense Sal Forest, cultivated and pastured lands, the Rampur Forest Block, mixed forests, and land owned by the irrigation department made up of shallow and deep-water regions.
The Asan River, a tributary of the Yamuna River, flows through the wetland, and the western side of the wetland has the 287.5-m-long barrage, with a water level maintained at 403.3 m above sea level. The wetland is recognised as one of the biodiversity hotspots and environmentally significant habitats in the Doon valley and has been declared as a conservation reserve by the Government of Uttarakhand.
The paper argues that: