John R. Platt, The
Revelator
April 2018
Dozens of these water-filtering species are at risk of vanishing, and that’s bad news for every living creature that relies on them.... It’s easy to see the potential for a cleaner system of waterways if mussels returned to more American rivers and streams.
Dozens of these water-filtering species are at risk of vanishing, and
that’s bad news for every living creature that relies on them.
John R. Platt
Give Rachel Mair two tanks of water and she’ll show you something amazing.
“When I do outreach at a festival, I put mud and algae and stuff in the
tanks,” says Mair, a biologist with the Harrison Lake National Fish Hatchery
in Charles City, Va. “Then I put some freshwater mussels in one tank and
tell people to come back and check on me in a few hours.”
Those few hours make a difference, as do the mussels. “People come back and
the water in the tank that has the mussels will be substantially cleaner,”
Mair says. “I say, which water you rather your kids play in or drink? That’s
what mussels are doing for you.”
Unfortunately, despite the service they provide to our rivers and streams, North America’s freshwater mussels now need some conservation muscle. Pretty much wherever they’re found, the shelled bivalves are disappearing. Many of the 300-plus mussel species in the United States have already been added to the endangered species list; many more are waiting for similar protection. Beautiful species with crazy names like the orangefoot pimpleback, purple bean, Higgins eye pearlymussel and pink mucket could soon be a thing of the past.
In part that’s because the very water the mussels filter through their
bodies has also often become dangerous to them. “A lot of our streams are
not as clear as they once were,” Mair says. “With all of the factories and
discharges and agriculture and increases in human population, there’s a lot
of pressure on our freshwater mussels.”
Scientists don’t always know exactly what levels of contaminants, such as
ammonia, affect which mussel species, but we do know is that it doesn’t
always take much. “They’re really very sensitive animals,” says Mair.
“They’re the canary in the coal mine for our freshwater resources — the
first thing to start disappearing when you have water-quality issues.”
Mussels also depend on something else that’s often in short supply in many
streams — fish. You see, most mussel species can’t reproduce without
assistance. In order to create the next generation, adult mussels lure in
nearby fish — often using fleshy appendages camouflaged to look like fish
food — then inject them full of larvae (glochidia) and let the fish carry
the young’uns around until they’re old enough and big enough to go back into
the water and survive on their own.
The important thing here is that not just any fish will do. Most mussel
species partake of this parasitic relationship with just a handful of fish
species; others rely on only one kind of fish. Unfortunately, thanks to
river dams, pollution, habitat loss and other factors, those fish often
aren’t available to mussels anymore. This has left all too many mussel
species with limited or nonexistent means of reproduction.
Figuring out how to keep all of these endangered mussels from going extinct
is no easy task. “There’s 300 species in North America,” Mair says. “They’re
not easy to study. They all need a host fish. They all have different
life-history aspects and different water-quality parameters that they can
survive in. So you have 300 species that have 300 different needs, and we
often don’t know what those needs are.”
Beyond biology, the species also face unique environmental challenges. “It’s
certainly harder to clean up rivers than it is to clean up the land,” Mair
says. “We can see what’s happening in the land and air. We don’t always see
what’s happening in the rivers. We don’t know if our water quality is bad
until we can go out there and physically test it.”
Even then, it’s not always easy to pinpoint — let alone resolve — whatever
factors might be affecting water clarity. “I mean, you’re talking about
thousands of acres,” she says. “Whatever is happening on those thousands of
acres, it’s going to be affecting that one stream where that one mussel
species lives. These are things that are out of our ability, especially as
biologists, to change. You know, I can’t fix the water quality.”
Pollution is bad enough. What comes next might be even worse for mussels.
“We’re coming into drought, climate change, water temperatures warming up —
there are a lot of other things at play,” she says.
That’s not stopping people, though. More and more scientists are looking
into how to breed mussels in captivity. Many of them are learning their
craft from experts like Mair, who is one of the co-authors of a
just-released book, Freshwater Mussel Propagation for Restoration (Cambridge
University Press, March 2018). “There are so many people now that are
starting to produce mussels,” she says. “My hope is that this book at least
sends them on the right track.”
Mair adds that she knows the need for this knowledge base exists. “We teach
a propagation class every year at the National Conservation Training Center
in West Virginia, and every year we have a full class.” People also contact
her year-round. “I get questions all the time. ‘I’m starting to grow
mussels, how do I do this and do that?’ Nobody needs to start out at point
zero. There are a lot of people out there that have been doing it, and I
guess that’s my take-home message: Just contact somebody to help you and get
you started.”
Of course, some of these mussel species are so rare now that managing to
find a male and a female and bringing them together with the right host fish
feels daunting, if not next to impossible. On the other hand, a handful of
individuals and a few fish could help put a species back on the right track.
“If you get one larvae infestation, you could get a thousand juveniles,”
Mair says. “After they got big enough you could potentially put 500 back in
the river. That could be incredible. I think a lot of people are looking to
propagation right now because it’s the last strategy in a lot of cases.”
It’s easy to see the potential for a cleaner system of waterways if mussels
returned to more American rivers and streams. Some places are actually
already deploying mussels specifically to help purify the water. “A large
bed of mussels could filter millions of gallons of water a day,” Mair says.
“That’s pretty huge.”
There’s another reason to support your local mussels: “They are really just
amazing,” says Mair. She describes one critically endangered species, the
birdwing pearlymussel, which employs the greenside darter as its host fish.
“This mussel has a lure it sticks out that looks like a snail, with fake
antennae,” she says. The darter, in turn, loves to eat snails and has a
specialized mouth designed to suck the meat right out of a shell. The mussel
takes advantage of that. When a fish clamps down on the lure looking for a
bite to eat, it gets a face full of mussel larvae instead. And the circle of
life continues.
That’s just one out of many evolutionary marvels Mair recounts, each species
description more excited than the last. And that, she says, is why mussels
matter. “Yes, they clean water and that’s really important. But for me,
they’re just so interesting, so unique, and that diversity is what makes
nature great. I would hate to lose that.”
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