The Herald (South Africa)

Scientists will check damage from fracking

- Dave Chambers

WOULD-BE frackers of the Karoo‚ beware: scientists are watching you.

Three experts in shallow water ecosystems from Nelson Mandela Metropolit­an University say the invertebra­te population of dams‚ pans and rivers will be a good indicator of whether fracking damages the environmen­t.

To set a baseline‚ they took samples of macroinver­tebrates – creatures bigger than 1mm – from 33 water bodies.

And the fact that they found four new species in the process – a creeping water bug‚ a beetle and two mayflies – is evidence of the lack of detailed knowledge in “the proposed epicentre of shale gas extraction activities in South Africa”.

Annah Mabidi‚ Matthew Bird and Renzo Perissinot­to made two visits to nine dams‚ 13 pans and 11 rivers between Aberdeen in the west and Tarkastad in the east.

They swept the water with nets‚ and wrote up their findings in the journal PLOSone.

They said macroinver­tebrates were excellent indicators of human impacts on freshwater environmen­ts‚ and their sensitivit­y to increases in salinity – one of the possible side-effects of fracking – put them at potential risk.

The depletion of these organisms would affect the whole wetland community through cascading effects on other floral and faunal components, they said.

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