2011
DOI: 10.1080/02772248.2011.610798
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Effect of pH, iron and aluminum on survival of early life history stages of the endangered freshwater pearl mussel,Margaritifera margaritifera

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
17
0

Year Published

2015
2015
2022
2022

Publication Types

Select...
8

Relationship

0
8

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 24 publications
(17 citation statements)
references
References 23 publications
0
17
0
Order By: Relevance
“…Even after the improvement of Lake Orta conditions and the neutralization of pH values accomplished by liming (1989)(1990), studies documenting the progressive recovery of both pelagic and benthic populations (Baudo et al, 2001a;Bielli and Tesauro, 2001;Nocentini et al, 2001) failed to reveal the presence of mussels or any other molluscs. Since mussels are highly sensitive to acidification (Økland and Økland, 1986;Taskinen et al, 2011), ammonia (Augspurger et al, 2003;Wang et al, 2008) and heavy metals (Naimo, 1995;Keller et al, 2006), particularly at the earlier life stages (Wang et al, 2007a(Wang et al, , 2007bCope et al, 2008;Cleawater et al, 2014), the high sediment toxicity, that did not improved but was rather worsened by liming, likely hindered recolonization. Furthermore, once extirpated from a water body, mussels are not able to recolonize easily, particularly if they lack access to restocking populations (Strayer et al, 2004), due to constraints related to their complex life cycle.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Even after the improvement of Lake Orta conditions and the neutralization of pH values accomplished by liming (1989)(1990), studies documenting the progressive recovery of both pelagic and benthic populations (Baudo et al, 2001a;Bielli and Tesauro, 2001;Nocentini et al, 2001) failed to reveal the presence of mussels or any other molluscs. Since mussels are highly sensitive to acidification (Økland and Økland, 1986;Taskinen et al, 2011), ammonia (Augspurger et al, 2003;Wang et al, 2008) and heavy metals (Naimo, 1995;Keller et al, 2006), particularly at the earlier life stages (Wang et al, 2007a(Wang et al, , 2007bCope et al, 2008;Cleawater et al, 2014), the high sediment toxicity, that did not improved but was rather worsened by liming, likely hindered recolonization. Furthermore, once extirpated from a water body, mussels are not able to recolonize easily, particularly if they lack access to restocking populations (Strayer et al, 2004), due to constraints related to their complex life cycle.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since released glochidia larvae are more vulnerable to contaminants than glochidia attached to fish, or juvenile mussels (Taskinen et al, 2011), it seemed very important to try to define what conditions proved to be sufficient for Unio to re-colonize. Searching for an answer about the time of the supposed introduction, we estimated the age of individuals chosen by different size classes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…oligotrophic, silicate streams) and in situations in which the success of restoration measures or chances of reintroduction are to be assessed. Generally, the freshwater pearl mussel is notably one of the most sensitive freshwater organisms, reacting highly sensitive to changes in abiotic habitat conditions (Bauer, 1988;Geist, 2010;Geist and Auerswald, 2007;Hastie et al, 2000;Oesterling et al, 2008;Taskinen et al, 2011). Due to the high conservation status and mostly small population sizes, the availability of adult individuals is low.…”
Section: Conclusion For Bioindication and Conservationmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…There is a wide variety of contaminants that can potentially affect freshwater mussels, despite the small number of studies that explicitly address this issue in European species. In general, free glochidia larvae are more vulnerable to pollutants than glochidia attached to fish, or juvenile mussels and adults (Bringolf et al, 2007;Taskinen et al, 2011). The effects of point-source contamination can be highly detrimental to freshwater mussels, as was the case with a heavy metal spill in River Tisza in 2000, which probably affected freshwater mussel populations (Fleit & Lakatos, 2003).…”
Section: (C) Pollution and Eutrophicationmentioning
confidence: 99%