Authors: Louis A. Helfrich, Richard J. Neves, Diana L. Weigmann, Renee M. Speenburgh, and Braven Beaty Department of Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences Virginia Tech, and
Dick Biggins and Hilary Vinson, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Asheville Field Office, Asheville, North Carolina. Sponsored by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Asheville Field Office, Asheville, North Carolina
Publication Number 420-014, posted November 1997
The abundance and variety of mussels have declined sharply in this century. At the turn of the century, the shallow, swift-flowing shoal areas of many of the streams and rivers within the Ohio River basin were filled with millions of living mussels. Today, many of these areas harbor only remnant populations of mussels. Dam construction, siltation, water pollution, mining and industrial wastes, and the introduction of exotic shellfish seriously threaten their continued existence. At present, 30 mussel species are presumed extinct, 57 species are federally endangered or threatened, and nearly 70 species are species of concern nationwide. No other widespread animal group in North America has been jeopardized to this extent.
Conservation and recovery projects to artificially culture, reintroduce, and improve the habitats of pearly mussels are underway. However, water pollution continues to threaten streams crucial to their survival. Your help is needed to support mussel conservation efforts and safeguard their habitats. Why not adopt a local stream and clean it up? Also, promptly report water pollution problems to the natural resources agency in your state.
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Freshwater mussels are similar in appearance to their saltwater cousins--the oysters and clams -- from which they have originated. They have completely adapted to freshwater and are now widespread in the rivers, streams, lakes, and ponds of North America. Freshwater clams, such as the small fingernail clam, also live in the freshwaters of the United States
The freshwater mussels inhabiting our rivers sport colorful common names, based largely on their shell appearance, such as the monkeyface, shiny pigtoe, elephantear, pink heelsplitter, rabbitsfoot, purple wartyback, and black sandshell.
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The size, shape, color, and markings on the shell are used by biologists to identify the numerous species. Shell surfaces (periostracum) vary in color from yellow or green to brown or black; they may also contain distinctive ridges, rays, bumps, and textures. Many species have colored rays or chevron marks on their shells. The interior of the shell is composed of a pearly nacre that varies in color from pure white to shades of pink, salmon, gray, and purple. Males and females can sometimes be distinguished by their shell size and shape. The shells of the femalestruded from the substrate) in order to brood developing young.
Internally, the soft body consists of gills for breathing, a digestive tract for processing food, a large muscular foot for locomotion, and mantle tissue that produces the shell. The enlarged gills of a gravid (pregnant) female act as a brood pouch or nursery for developing young before they are released into the water.
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The major rivers of the Ohio River basin include the Ohio, Tennessee, Cumberland, Kentucky, Allegheny, Monogahela, Scioto, Wabash, Big Sandy, and Kanawha. The United States is a "mussel treasure chest," considered by malacologists (shellfish experts) to be the finest remaining stronghold for freshwater mussels on the planet. These animals can occur in abundance in certain areas called "mussel beds," which may contain more than 20 mussels per square foot of stream bottom.
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Mussels typically inhabit unpolluted, standing or flowing waters that are rich in oxygen, calcium, and suspended food particles. Most commonly they are found in large river systems like the Tennessee, Ohio, and Mississippi, but they also occur in medium-sized and small streams that have suitable water quality, bottom substrate, and food. Certain species of mussels have adapted to living in standing water (e.g., lakes, ponds, and reservoirs), but most are suited to living in rivers and streams where water currents supply abundant oxygen and suspended food particles favorable for growth and reproduction.
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The freshwater mussel has a unique life cycle, to include a short parasitic stage attached to fish. The life of a mussel can be partitioned into five distinct life stages: ( 1) a larva (called glochidium) developing in the gill of a female mussel, (2) a free-drifting glochidium expelled from the female mussel, (3) a parasitic glochidium attached to the gills or fins of a living host fish, (4) a free-living juvenile mussel, and (5) the adult mussel.
Reproduction occurs when the male mussel releases sperm into the water column, which is siphoned into the female mussel to fertilize the eggs. Reproduction may be triggered by increasing water temperatures and day length. Development and retention of larvae (smaller than a pinhead in size) within the female may last from 1 to 10 months.
Glochidia generally are released from the female in spring and early summer (April to July). These tiny creatures drift in the water current seeking a suitable fish host. Timing is critical for these larvae, for they cannot survive long outside of the female mussel or without a host fish. Unlike oysters and clams, freshwater mussels require a fish host in order to complete their life cycle. As parasites, glochidia are dependent on fish for their nutrition at this part of their life. Somemussels may depend only on a single fish species, whereas others can parasitize many different fishes. The attachment of glochidia causes no problems for the host fish. If they find a host fish, they clamp onto the gills or fins and remain attached for one to four weeks while transforming into a juvenile mussel. As juveniles, they drop off the fish and begin their free-living life.
If glochidia do not find a suitable fish host within a few days of drifting in the water column, they die. To help ensure that they find a host fish, some species of mussels have developed special adaptations. Some adult female mussels have enlarged mantle tissue called mantle flaps that look like prey (worms, insect larva, or small fish) and which attract a fish looking for food. When fish nip at these structures, resembling potential food items, the female releases glochidia into the water column which clamp onto the gills or fins of the fish host.
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Today, mussels are not recommended as food for humans or domestic animals because they accumulate and store toxic metals and other water pollutants in their tissues. Although they provide an important service to us, mussels from polluted waters could pose a health risk if consumed.
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Thousands of tons of mussels were gathered by mussel hunters, loaded on barges, and transported to button factories conveniently located along major rivers. With the advent of cheaper and more durable plastic buttons, the mussel mother-of-pearl button industry died. However, since the late 1950s a new demand for mussel shell originated -- to supply the Japanese cultured pearl industry.
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Cultured (manmade) pearls are formed by shellfish, as are natural pearls. However, the difference is that they are created by "implanting" a small bead into a live oyster or mussel and waiting (sometimes for as long as 7 years) for the animal to cover this bead with nacre. Because of their large size, spherical shape, color, and high demand, cultured pearls are sold worldwide.
Today in the United States, wild mussels can still be harvested for their shells in some states; however, many states forbid the commercial harvest of freshwater mussels. Each year thousands of tons of live mussels are taken from our river bottoms and steamed open to remove the meat, and the shells are sacked for export to Japan. Globally, the production of cultured pearls has become a multi-billion dollar industry.
Mussels are harvested in a number of ways. Many harvesters still collect mussels by fishing for them with metal bead-tipped hooks attached to wires on a metal bar that is lowered to the river bottom by a rope. Using this old technique, called brailing, the hooks are dragged along the bottom until they contact an open mussel which promptly "hooks itself" by closing securely on the hook. Periodically, the brail is lifted to the water surface, and all the hooked mussels are removed. Some mussel harvesters simply hand-pick mussels from shallow waters in river shoals or lake bays as they wade, snorkel, or dive (using SCUBA gear). The commercial harvest of freshwater mussels provides jobs for many people living along these rivers.
In Japan, the shells of our freshwater mussels are cut and ground into small round beads which are inserted into live Japanese pearl oysters suspended in saltwater embayments. The pellet irritates the oyster, causing it to secrete a mother-of-pearl layer (nacre) over the circular bead, thereby soothing the irritation and creating a cultured pearl.
Pearls, then, are the product of a shellfish self-defense system that either expels the foreign bead particle or coats it with nacre. In this manner, shell from an American mussel forms the center of nearly every Japanese cultured pearl.
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Mussels have great scientific value as indicators of environmental health. They are used by biologists as "biological monitors" to indicate past and present water quality conditions in rivers and lakes. A sudden kill of freshwater mussels is a reliable indicator of toxic contamination in flowing and standing waters. The gradual disappearance of freshwater mussels usually indicates chronic water pollution problems. Moreover, biologists can measure the amount of pollutants found in mussel tissue to determine the type and extent of water pollution in streams and lakes. Biomedical uses of mussels are presently being studied. Evidence from cancer research suggests that some mussels may be resistant to certain types of cancer and that the extraction of cancer-curing drugs from mollusks may be feasible in the future.
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Disease and overharvesting by commercial shellers are only minor contributing factors to the mussel decline. In the future, competition with the exotic zebra mussel, accidently introduced to waters of the United States from Europe, will cause further declines of our native mussels. Many of these threats, acting singly or in combination, have resulted in the significant depletion of freshwater mussel populations nationally.
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Mussels are directly killed when they are crushed or removed from the stream channel, as dredging for stream gravel and sand or channeling to straighten streams occur. Mussels are indirectly destroyed when their stream-bottom habitat is removed or altered. All stream and river bottoms in many states are public property. Dam building, gravel dredging, stream channeling, wetland filling, and other alterations to rivers or streams require permits from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and other federal and state agencies.
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Although adult mussels have the ability to "clam up" for a limited time and avoid poisonous chemicals that flow downstream, young mussels are often killed immediately. Multiple spills or longterm, chronic leaching of toxins into streams will eventually kill the entire population. Water pollution is "double trouble" for mussels. It can either kill mussels directly or kill the fish hosts on which they depend for successful reproduction, ultimately eliminating the mussels.
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Because of this strong mussel/fish interdependence, any threat to host fish also jeopardizes mussel survival. If suitable host fish disappear, due to fish community changes, fish migration blockades such as dams, water pollution, or other causes, mussel populations cannot survive in the long term. If fish are killed by water pollution, even though mussels may survive by "clamming up," no mussel reproduction will occur in the absence of host fish. If the host fish population becomes too small, it could endanger mussel reproduction. In streams with few or no host fish, it may be necessary to restock suitable hosts to promote mussel reproduction.
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The following key to 12 selected mussels (actually ten native mussels and two closely-related nonnative bivalves) found in the Ohio River basin is included to provide you with some practice in identifying freshwater mussels. By using the key, you should gain some understanding of the diversity of native mussels and learn some of the shell characteristics used to distinguish one mussel species from another.
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Burch, J. B. 1973. Freshwater unionacean clams (Mollusca: Pelecypoda) of North America. Biota of Freshwater Ecosystems, Identification Manual 11:1-76.
Cummings, K. S., and C. A. Mayer. 1992. Field guide to freshwater mussels of the midwest. Illinois Natural History Survey. Manual 5. 194 pp.
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Key to 10 Selected Bivalve Mollusks of the Ohio River Basin
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