Natural History and Conservation of Freshwater Mussels (Order: Unionida) of Wisconsin
Author: Vincent Learmonth Butitta
Publisher:
Published: 2022
Total Pages: 0
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKFreshwater mussels are an endangered groups of animals globally, as the conservation status of at least 40% of mussel species are classified as imperiled. They have faced, and continue to face, numerous threats associated with the increasing impacts of humans on freshwater ecosystems and their future is uncertain. Currently, our ability to effectively protect vulnerable freshwater mussel species is limited in part by a lack of understanding of important aspects of their life history and ecology. The studies within this thesis span a scale from physiological to state-wide and examine life-history and ecological characteristics important for freshwater mussel conservation. In chapter one, I showed how mussel growth in a population (Lampsilis siliquoidea) living in an oligotrophic lake can be related to broad-scale natural changes in their environment. This chapter contributes to the very small body of work describing important life-history characteristics of mussels in lakes and how their growth is related to unique characteristics of their ecosystem. In chapter two, I examined physiological responses of a lake-dwelling populations of the native freshwater mussel Lampsilis siliquoidea as they responded to the stress of an invasive zebra mussel infestation. I demonstrated that physiological profiles of stress were identifiable in populations under natural environmental conditions and that these profiles were consistent with studies of stress under laboratory conditions. I also demonstrated that physiological signs of stress are not necessarily apparent in metabolites central to important physiological processes, but can be obscured by supplemental processes that can compensate for the immediate effects on primary metabolites. In chapter three, I conducted a state-wide assessment of how native mussel communities in Wisconsin have changed over the past 50 years. I provided evidence that substantial losses have likely occurred for many of Wisconsin's native mussel populations and demonstrated that the patterns of loss have not been uniform across the state.