Abstract

ABSTRACT A variety of competitive advantages accompany colonization of hard substrates in aquatic settings, and as a result, many organisms adopt this mode of life. Similarly, adverse effects may occur to organisms that have themselves been encrusted. Many marine basibiont faunas (organisms that provide a substrate for populations of attached epibiontic organisms), including bivalve mollusks, are known to employ a range of chemical and physical deterrents to minimize the incidence of epibiotic attachment, with its attendant detrimental impacts. Freshwater basibiont and epibiont associations, however, are poorly documented. We collected an assemblage of dead, empty freshwater mussel (unionid bivalve) shells from the Saint John River, New Brunswick, Canada. Some unionid specimens exhibited colonization by attached Trichoptera (caddisfly) cases, in either their final instar larval or pupal developmental stages. The trichopteran assemblage, identified from case morphology, included abundant Neophylax sp. toge...

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