4.6 Article

Habitat compression of an estuarine mytilid following half a century of streamflow decline

Journal

ESTUARINE COASTAL AND SHELF SCIENCE
Volume 282, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecss.2023.108253

Keywords

Xenostrobus securis; Climate change; Marinization; South-western Australia

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Declining streamflow in southwestern Australia has led to habitat compression for Xenostrobus securis, posing a threat to their survival.
The distribution of species throughout estuaries is often regulated by salinity gradients, among other key environmental drivers. In many temperate estuaries, however, declining streamflow has led to increased marinization and thus potential habitat compression of some species. Since the mid-1970s, estuaries in south-western Australia have experienced among the greatest decline in streamflow in Australia due to a drying and warming climate. The resultant habitat modification would be particularly unfavourable to sessile fauna, such as mytilid mussels, which are unable to relocate due to their attachment to substrate via byssal threads. This study compared the settlement (and adult survival) of Black Pygmy Mussel Xenostrobus securis in the Swan-Canning Estuary with that described in this system sixty years earlier, over which time freshwater discharge declined by >50%. During the 1960s, settlement of X. securis occurred throughout much of the estuary, beginning in the estuary basin in November and in the upper Swan River in February/March as winter freshwater flow subsided and salinities increased. In contrast, in the current study (2019/2020), X. securis settlement was largely restricted to the upper zones of the estuary. Settlement of X. securis larvae also began much earlier, occurring in the upper Swan River in October, compared with February/March during the 1960s. This is consistent with the salinity tolerances of larval X. securis and declining streamflow, leading to increased marinization of the estuary basin and earlier encroachment of the salt-wedge upstream. In addition, the increased frequency of summer streamflow events in recent decades makes X. securis populations even more vulnerable to substantial mortalities caused by rapid dilution of salinity at warmer temperatures. Thus, the combination of habitat compression, from declining streamflow and increased occurrence of extreme summer rainfall events are likely to pose substantial problems for the survival of X. securis populations in this region into the future. The results of this study further our knowledge on the potential impacts of environmental change on sessile fauna and is of interest to environmental managers.

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