4.6 Article

Declines in freshwater mussel density, size and productivity in the River Thames over the past half century

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
Volume 92, Issue 1, Pages 112-123

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.13835

Keywords

biodiversity loss; biomass; freshwater mussels; growth rate; invasive species; population dynamics; unionids; zebra mussels

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A pioneering quantitative study conducted in 1966 on freshwater mussel populations in the River Thames, UK, has been extensively cited as evidence of the significant contribution of mussels to global river ecosystems. A recent resurvey of the same site revealed large declines in mussel population density, changes in species composition, growth patterns, and productivity. The study also highlighted the invasion of nonnative mussel species and the detrimental impact on ecosystem services in the River Thames.
A pioneering, quantitative study published in Journal of Animal Ecology in 1966 on freshwater mussel populations in the River Thames, UK, continues to be cited extensively as evidence of the major contribution that mussels make to benthic biomass and ecosystem functioning in global river ecosystems. Ecological alteration, as well as declines in freshwater mussel populations elsewhere, suggest that changes to mussel populations in the River Thames are likely to have occurred over the half century since this study. We resurveyed the site reported in Negus (1966) and quantified the changes in mussel population density, species composition, growth patterns and productivity. We found large declines in population density for all unionid species. The duck mussel Anodonta anatina decreased to 1.1% of 1964 density. The painter's mussel Unio pictorum fell to 3.2% of 1964 density. The swollen river mussel Unio tumidus showed statistically nonsignificant declines. In contrast to 1964, in 2020 we found no living specimens of the depressed river mussel Pseudanodonta complanata (classified as Vulnerable by the IUCN Red List) but found new records of the invasive, nonnative zebra mussel Dreissena polymorpha and Asian clam Corbicula fluminea. Additionally, we found strong decreases in size-at-age for all species, which now grow to 65-90% of maximum lengths in 1964. As a result of reduced density and size, estimated annual biomass production fell to 7.5% of 1964 levels. Since mussels can be important to ecosystem functioning, providing key regulating and provisioning services, the declines we found imply substantial degradation of freshwater ecosystem services in the River Thames, one of the UK's largest rivers. Our study also highlights the importance to conservationists and ecologists of updating and validating assumptions and data about wild populations, which in the present era of anthropogenic ecosystem alteration are undergoing significant and rapid changes. Regular population surveys of key species are essential to maintain an accurate picture of ecosystem health and to guide management.

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