Abstract

Abstract Alterations to water management practices, in response to a growing demand to maximize energy production from renewable sources, threaten to exacerbate anticipated future water shortages caused by severe drought episodes, brought on by climate change. Across Scotland, many highly managed systems are inhabited by some of the last remaining reproductively viable populations of the freshwater pearl mussel, Margaritifera margaritifera. A lack of empirical evidence concerning mussel responses to alterations in flow is inhibiting the development of effective conservation management practices to prolonged drought. This study addressed this knowledge gap by examining the response of M. margaritifera to controlled water level drawdowns in laboratory and field settings. Using a laboratory flume, the responses of M. margaritifera from two different populations (a regulated system versus an unregulated system) were compared across rates of drawdown and density treatments. An analogous field trial was undertaken to examine the responses of M. margaritifera in a regulated system, with a hydroelectric dam facilitating a controlled drawdown. The study showed that M. margaritifera can detect alterations in flow depth, which culminate in the emersion of mussel beds, and respond by undertaking vertical and horizontal movements to mitigate the risk of prolonged aerial exposure. Results from the field trial corroborated findings from the flume experiments, with 80% of mussels shown to avoid emersion successfully by tracking receding water levels. Findings from this study support the role of controlled drawdowns in regulated rivers to reduce mortalities associated with receding water levels during prolonged low‐flow episodes. Differences between populations in response highlight a need to adopt a context‐dependent approach to conservation efforts.

Highlights

  • The freshwater pearl mussel, Margaritifera margaritifera, is one of the most threatened and widely researched unionid species (Bauer & Wachtler, 2001; Arvidsson, Karlsson & Österling, 2012; Cosgrove et al, 2016), with evidence to suggest that it fulfils the criteria for an indicator, flagship, umbrella, and keystone species (Geist, 2010)

  • Previous studies have established the potential for freshwater mussel species to identify alterations in the hydrological environment and undertake behavioural responses to mitigate the risk of prolonged aerial exposure (Balfour & Smock, 1995; Gough, Gascho Landis & Stoeckel, 2012; Lymbery et al, 2020)

  • These have been consigned to species inhabiting intermittent freshwater systems within arid and semi-arid climates, with no consideration towards species within temperate environments that are likely to experience more extreme hydrological alterations resulting from future climate change

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The freshwater pearl mussel, Margaritifera margaritifera, is one of the most threatened and widely researched unionid species (Bauer & Wachtler, 2001; Arvidsson, Karlsson & Österling, 2012; Cosgrove et al, 2016), with evidence to suggest that it fulfils the criteria for an indicator, flagship, umbrella, and keystone species (Geist, 2010). Scotland remains one of the last strongholds for the species, with river systems in the Scottish Highlands continuing to support large reproductively viable populations (Cosgrove et al, 2016), defined by their ability to be self-sustainable without requiring the addition of new genetic material originating from outside the system (British Standards Institution, 2017). Many of these important populations inhabit regulated rivers, managed for hydroelectric energy production.

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call