Physicochemical stream bed characteristics and recruitment of the freshwater pearl mussel (Margaritifera margaritifera)
- 17 June 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Freshwater Biology
- Vol. 52 (12), 2299-2316
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2427.2007.01812.x
Abstract
Summary: 1. The freshwater pearl mussel (Margaritifera margaritifera) is endangered and of conservation importance. We used its survival/mortality during the critical post‐parasitic phase as a biological indicator for the habitat quality of the stream substratum.2. We established and tested biological, physical and chemical methods of assessing the stream bed in 26 streams from seven European countries. We analysed penetration resistance, texture, the concentrations and ratios of C, N, S, P, Fe, Mn in fine material μm, and redox, pH and electric conductivity at the surface and at 5 and 10 cm into the substratum.3. Sites with high stream bed quality (promoting pearl mussel populations with good juvenile recruitment) had coarser and better sorted substrata with significantly lower quantities of fines, and a higher Mn concentration in the fines, than poor quality sites. Redox potential (Eh) at sites without recruitment differed markedly between the free‐flowing water at the surface and at 5 and 10 cm in the bed, whereas no differences were detectable at good quality sites. This was also true of electric conductivity and, to a lesser extent, pH. The stream bed at sites lacking pearl mussel recruitment had a more variable and higher penetration resistance, indicating clogging of the interstitial macropore system by the deposition of mud and compaction of the stream bed.4. Our results show that habitat quality for pearl mussels depends strongly on the exchange between the surface and the interstices, which is governed by physicochemical characteristics of the stream substratum. Combined measurements of penetration resistance, depth gradients of Eh and texture were most suitable for assessing stream bed quality, while water chemistry was insufficient because of the decoupling of interstitial and free‐flowing water at poor quality sites.Keywords
This publication has 57 references indexed in Scilit:
- The functional role of native freshwater mussels in the fluvial benthic environmentFreshwater Biology, 2006
- Buckets of muckets: A compact system for rearing juvenile freshwater musselsAquaculture, 2005
- The importance of microhabitat factors and habitat stability to the threatened Louisiana pearl shell, Margaritifera hembeli (Conrad)Canadian Journal of Zoology, 2000
- Using relief parameters in a discriminant analysis to stratify geological areas with different spatial variability of soil propertiesGeoderma, 1999
- Evaluating the resistance to penetration within the surface layer of soil aggregatesSoil Technology, 1994
- Conservation Status of Freshwater Mussels of the United States and CanadaFisheries, 1993
- Comparison of three measures of resistance of soil surface seals to raindrop splashSoil Technology, 1992
- Description of Brown Trout Redds in a Mountain StreamTransactions of the American Fisheries Society, 1991
- Threats to the freshwater pearl mussel Margaritifera margaritifera L. in Central EuropeBiological Conservation, 1988
- The status and conservation of the freshwater pearl mussel Margaritifera margaritifera Linn. in Great BritainBiological Conservation, 1983