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Massive mortality of the giant freshwater mussel Anodontites trapesialis (Lamarck, 1819) (Bivalvia: Mycetopodidae) during a severe drought in a Neotropical reservoir

Abstract

In 2012, a severe drought struck the southeastern of Brazil compromising the Paraná River Basin reservoirs. Here, we described how this climatic event promoted a massive mortality of the giant freshwater mussel Anodontites trapesialis in Furnas reservoir and reported the consequences of this phenomenon. In November 2012, three quarters of 100 m2 were sampled in this reservoir, where 812 dead shells of A. trapesialis were analyzed and measured (33 ˫ 133 mm). The species showed an aggregated distribution with high density (X¯: 1.0 - 5.5 ind/m2). Despite the massive mortality detected in field, it was possible to find living specimens in a small channel in the studied area, allowing the species to survive the water level fluctuations. Large adult individuals (100 ˫ 124 mm) were more affected by drought than juveniles, accounting for about 90% of the dead mussels analyzed. Two years after the massive mortality event, water level was not reestablished and a terrestrial succession (with elevations in the concentration of organic matter and calcium in sediment) was observed in the studied area. We verified that the damming associated with extreme climatic events affect negatively the populations of A. trapesialis and should be faced as a conservationist problem.

Key words
Unionida; die-off; hydric stress; conservation; Mollusca

INTRODUCTION

The giant freshwater mussel Anodontites trapesialis (Lamarck, 1819) is a functional simultaneous hermaphrodite bivalve with a trapezoid shell, with records of some specimens reaching over than 200 mm (Simone 1994SIMONE LRL. 1994. Anatomical characters and systematics of Anodontites trapesialis (Lamarck, 1819) from South America (Mollusca, Bivalvia, Unionoida, Muteloidea). Stud Neotrop Fauna E 29: 169-185., Callil & Mansur 2007CALLIL CT & MANSUR MCD. 2007. Gametogênese e dinâmica da reprodução de Anodontites trapesialis (Lamarck) (Unionoida: Mycetopodidae) no lago Baía do Poço, planície de inundação do rio Cuiabá, Mato Grosso. Zoologia 24: 825-840.). It is the most widely distributed bivalve in the South America basins, and shows a wide geographical distribution in Americas, occurring from some Central America basins to Argentinean Patagonian basins. This species, which occurs naturally in lotic environments has been commonly found in artificial lakes and reservoirs, especially in areas used for fish farming (Graf & Cummings 2007GRAF DL & CUMMINGS KV. 2007. Review of the systematics and global diversity of freshwater mussel species (Bivalvia: Unionoida). J Molluscan Stud 73: 291-314., Pereira et al. 2014PEREIRA D ET AL. 2014. Bivalve distribution in hydrographic regions in South America: historical overview and conservation. Hydrobiologia 735: 15-44., Torres et al. 2018TORRES S, CAO L, GUTIERREZ GREGORIC D, DE LUCIA M, BREA F & DARRIGRAN G. 2018. Distribution of the Unionida (Bivalvia, Paleoheterodonta) from Argentina and its conservation in the Southern Neotropical Region. PLoS ONE 13: 1-15.). This is due to the fact that their larvae (lasidium type) are capable to use non-native fish species as hosts, as is the case of the tilapia Oreochromis spp. (Guardia-Felipi & Silva-Souza 2008GUARDIA-FELIPI P & SILVA-SOUZA AT. 2008. Anodontites trapesialis (Lamarck, 1819): um bivalve parasito de peixes de água doce. Semina: Ciências Agrárias 29: 895-904., Callil et al. 2012CALLIL CT, KRINSKI D & SILVA FA. 2012. Variations on the larval incubation of Anodontites trapesialis (Unionoida, Mycetopodidae): Synergetic effect of the environmental factors and host availability. Braz J Biol 72: 545-552.). However, when this species inhabits reservoirs it suffers from certain environmental restrictions due to damming, which significantly affects its population structure (L.R.P. Paschoal & D.P. Andrade, unpublished data).

Reservoirs are artificial man-made environments used for multiple purposes, such as: leisure, energy production and public supply. Brazil is the country with the largest number of reservoirs (N = 393) in the world (FAO 2016FAO - FOOD AND AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION OF THE UNITED NATIONS. 2016. AQUASTAT website. URL: <www.fao.org/nr/water/aquastat/dams/index.stm>. Accessed: 01.02.17.
www.fao.org/nr/water/aquastat/dams/index...
). In general, they are considered as intermediate type water bodies, since they have a retention time of two to forty days. The upstream area of these environments has lentic characteristics, while the downstream areas have lotic conditions (Henry 1999HENRY R. 1999. Ecologia de reservatórios: estrutura, função e aspectos sociais. Botucatu: Fapesp/Fundibio Brazil, 800 p., Brasil 2012BRASIL. 2012. MINISTÉRIO DO MEIO AMBIENTE. CONAMA - CONSELHO NACIONAL DO MEIO AMBIENTE. Resolução nº 357, de 17 de março de 2005. Dispõe sobre a classificação dos corpos de água e diretrizes ambientais para o seu enquadramento, bem como estabelece as condições e padrões de lançamento de efluentes, e dá outras providências. Brasília: Ministério do Meio Ambiente, 1126 p.). In these environments, certain natural physical-hydrological phenomena (added or not by anthropic impacts) occur irregularly in time and space, promoting instability in benthic communities that live in these areas. The main natural limiting phenomena (factors) are the deposition of particulate matter, the action of waves on the margins and water column level fluctuations (Agostinho et al. 1992AGOSTINHO AA, JÚLIO JR HF & BORGHETTI JR. 1992. Considerações sobre os impactos dos represamentos na ictiofauna e medidas para sua atenuação. Um estudo de caso: Reservatório de Itaipu. Rev UNIMAR 14: 89-107., Andrade et al. 2012ANDRADE DP, PASCHOAL LRP, RIGOLIN-SÁ O & FRANÇA N. 2012. Assessment of Hydroelectric Power Station Marechal Mascarenhas de Morais fifth-order tributaries water quality at the Rio Grande watershed (Minas Gerais State, Brazil). Acta Limnol Bras 24: 326-337., Paschoal et al. 2015PASCHOAL LRP, ANDRADE DP & DARRIGRAN G. 2015. How the fluctuations of water levels affect populations of invasive bivalve Corbicula fluminea (Müller, 1774) in a Neotropical reservoir? Braz J Biol 75: 135-143.).

The decrease in water level and the exposure to air caused by droughts are considered the main factors responsible for desiccation in bivalves (Collas et al. 2014COLLAS FPL, KOOPMAN KR, HENDRIKS AJ, VAN DER VELDE G, VERBRUGGE LNH & LEUVEN RSEW. 2014. Effects of desiccation on native and non-native molluscs in rivers. Freshwater Biol 59: 41-55., Paschoal et al. 2015PASCHOAL LRP, ANDRADE DP & DARRIGRAN G. 2015. How the fluctuations of water levels affect populations of invasive bivalve Corbicula fluminea (Müller, 1774) in a Neotropical reservoir? Braz J Biol 75: 135-143.). Some species of freshwater mollusks are capable of surviving to desiccation by hibernating and/or migrating to deeper or more humid aquatic zones (Darrigran & Lopez-Armengol 1998DARRIGRAN G & LOPEZ-ARMENGOL MF. 1998. Composition, structure and distribution of malacofauna living on a hard substrate at the Argentinian shore of Río de la Plata, Argentina. Gayana 62: 79-89., Darrigran & Lagreca 2005DARRIGRAN G & LAGRECA M. 2005. Moluscos Litorales del Estuario del Río de la Plata. ProBiota. Buenos Aires: Serie Técnica y Didactica nº 8, 41 p.). However, several studies have reported a massive mortality of bivalves caused by desiccation, when high density and biomass of individuals were transported and stranded on the coastal areas due to environmental changes caused by extreme climatic events (e.g. Ilarri et al. 2011ILARRI MI, ANTUNES C, GUILHERMINO L & SOUSA R. 2011. Massive mortality of the Asian clam Corbicula fluminea in a highly invaded area. Biol Invasions 13: 277-280., Sousa et al. 2012SOUSA R, VARANDAS S, CORTES R, TEIXEIRA A, LOPES-LIMA M, MACHADO J & GUILHERMINO L. 2012. Massive die-offs of freshwater bivalves as resource pulses. Ann Limnol Int J Lim 48: 105-112., 2018SOUSA R, FERREIRA A, CARVALHO F, LOPES-LIMA M, VARANDAS S & TEIXEIRA A. 2018. Die-offs of the endangered pearl mussel Margaritifera margaritifera during an extreme drought. Aquatic Conserv Mar Freshw Ecosyst 28: 1244-1248., Paschoal et al. 2015PASCHOAL LRP, ANDRADE DP & DARRIGRAN G. 2015. How the fluctuations of water levels affect populations of invasive bivalve Corbicula fluminea (Müller, 1774) in a Neotropical reservoir? Braz J Biol 75: 135-143., Vaughn et al. 2015VAUGHN CC, ATKINSON CL & JULIAN JP. 2015. Drought-induced changes in flow regimes lead to long-term losses in mussel-provided ecosystem services. Ecol Evol 5: 1291-1305.). In these studies, the authors correlated this situation mainly to the low capacity of locomotion of these animals, added to temporal variability of the physical conditions of these transitional environments.

In recent years, severe droughts have dramatically altered the aquatic environments of Brazil (Nazareno & Laurance 2015NAZARENO AG & LAURANCE WF. 2015. Brazil’s drought: Beware deforestation. Science 347: 1427.). Melo et al. (2016)MELO DCD, SCANLON BR, ZHANG Z, WENDLAND E & YIN L. 2016. Reservoir storage and hydrologic responses to droughts in the Paraná River basin, south-eastern Brazil. Hydrol Earth Syst Sc 20: 4673-4688. verified that the water supply was much compromised in reservoirs of the Paraná River Basin (southeastern of Brazil) due to a prolonged drought. In 2012, a severe drought was recorded for the Southeast region of Brazil, promoting decreases in water levels in certain reservoirs of this region up to 17 meters below the usual average for the same period (ANA 2017ANA - AGÊNCIA NACIONAL DE ÁGUAS. 2017. Sistema Nacional de Informações sobre recursos hídricos. Brasil: ANA. URL: <http://portalsnirh.ana.gov.br>. Acessado em 01.02.17.
http://portalsnirh.ana.gov.br...
, ONS 2017ONS - Operador Nacional do Sistema Elétrico. 2017. Histórico da Operação. Brasil: ONS. URL: <http://http://www.ons.org. br>. Acessado em 01.02.17.
http://http://www.ons.org...
). Considering this scenario, the present study verified how the decrease of the water level in a Neotropical reservoir promoted by drought and damming, caused a massive mortality of the giant freshwater mussel A. trapesialis. In addition, we pointed ecological and conservation implications of this phenomenon.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Study site

The reservoir of the Furnas Hydroelectric Power Station (HPS) is composed mainly by the Grande and Sapucaí rivers (upper Paraná Basin) (Fig. 1). It is the largest reservoir in the state of Minas Gerais (flooded area:​ 1,440 km2) and one of the most important in Brazil, extending throughout 36 municipalities. The reservoir is used for energy production, as well as a water reserve, a recreational place and source of income for many families that live from fishing, and also directly and indirectly harbors great diversity of wildlife (Paschoal et al. 2012PASCHOAL LRP, STRIPARI NL & CARVALHO K. 2012. Estrutura da comunidade de macroinvertebrados bentônicos no reservatório da usina hidréletrica de Furnas, Minas Gerais, Brasil. In: Rigolin-Sá O (Ed), Bacia Hidrográfica: Estudos do Rio Grande no Sudoeste de Minas Gerais - Brasil. Edifesp: Passos, p. 169-182.).

Figure 1
Map showing sampling site location at Furnas HPS reservoir (state of Minas Gerais, southeastern Brazil).

The present study was conducted at the margins of a portion of the Sapucaí River (20° 58’ 23” S, 46° 07’ 08” W), inserted in the Furnas HPS reservoir, municipality of Carmo do Rio Claro, Minas Gerais state (southeastern of Brazil) (Figs. 1 and 2). This area is characterized by high water column fluctuation levels throughout the year, clay-sandy sediment, pebbles and boulders in its margins, and predominance of the macrophyte Brachiaria sp. near the margin and Eichhornia azurea (Swartz) Kunth ten meters away from the margin (Paschoal et al. 2015PASCHOAL LRP, ANDRADE DP & DARRIGRAN G. 2015. How the fluctuations of water levels affect populations of invasive bivalve Corbicula fluminea (Müller, 1774) in a Neotropical reservoir? Braz J Biol 75: 135-143.).

Figure 2
Variation of the water column in sampling site at Furnas HPS reservoir (Sapucaí River, state of Minas Gerais). a. 2011 - Flooded area (typical pattern). b. 2012 - Exposed area due to a severe drought. c. 2014 - Terrestrial succession after two years of the massive mortality of Anodontites trapesialis. a-b. Modified from Paschoal et al. (2015)PASCHOAL LRP, ANDRADE DP & DARRIGRAN G. 2015. How the fluctuations of water levels affect populations of invasive bivalve Corbicula fluminea (Müller, 1774) in a Neotropical reservoir? Braz J Biol 75: 135-143..

The water column levels and accumulated precipitation patterns during the period from January 2000 to December 2015 were verified using data from ANA (2017)ANA - AGÊNCIA NACIONAL DE ÁGUAS. 2017. Sistema Nacional de Informações sobre recursos hídricos. Brasil: ANA. URL: <http://portalsnirh.ana.gov.br>. Acessado em 01.02.17.
http://portalsnirh.ana.gov.br...
and ONS (2017)ONS - Operador Nacional do Sistema Elétrico. 2017. Histórico da Operação. Brasil: ONS. URL: <http://http://www.ons.org. br>. Acessado em 01.02.17.
http://http://www.ons.org...
. Mean monthly values of these variables were computed, showing that from June to October the water column level of the reservoir tends to decline due to low precipitation levels in the previous months (May to September), until it reaches its minimum level in November (Fig. 3a). However, it was possible to observe that in 2012, December was the month with the lowest water column level due to a severe drought occurred in the Southeastern region of Brazil (Fig. 3b). The storage capacity (volume of the flooded area) of ​​the Furnas HPS reservoir fell below 13% of its total capacity in December, and during the months of November and December showed the water column level below five meters (Fig. 3b), far from the average recorded for the last 15 years for the region - 9.2 to 10.5 meters (Fig. 3a). The present study was only possible to be performed in the present condition (i.e. drought and lower water column levels), since such areas are inaccessible when the reservoir is in its normal hydrological conditions (Fig. 2).

Figure 3
a. Accumulated precipitation and water column mean values from 2000 to 2015, and b. absolute values from 2012 for the Sapucaí River inserted at Furnas HPS reservoir.

Data sampling

Sampling was performed on November 2nd, 2012. The collection and analysis permissions were granted by MMA/ICMBio/SISBIO (license 36210-1). Twelve living bivalves were collected in a small channel (i.e. original river channel before impoundment) near to the sampled area (Figs. 2b and 4) and transported to the laboratory. These mussels were identified according to Simone (1994, 2006SIMONE LRL. 2006. Land and freshwater molluscs of Brazil: an illustrated inventory on the Brazilian malacofauna, including neighbour regions of the South America, respect to the terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems. São Paulo: FAPESP, 390 p.) and had its shell length (L), height (H) and width (Wi) measured (Fig. S1 - Supplementary Material). The wet weight (We) of each individual was obtained with an analytical scale (± 0.001 g), after being dried with absorbent paper. Subsequently, these animals were euthanized by freezing (-20 °C / 30 min.) and preserved in 70% ethanol. These bivalves were deposited at the Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de São Paulo (MZSP), under the number 109106.

Figure 4
a-b. Massive mortality of Anodontites trapesialis with great accumulation of dead shells at Furnas HPS reservoir. Black arrows indicate the channel where living specimens were collected. Note the dry cracked soil during drought.

In field, we analyzed three areas along the margin of the Sapucaí River channel, each one comprising a quarter of 100 m2 (subdivided into 100 quadrats of 1 m2). These quarters were distant 40 meters from each other, and the right side of each quarter was the closest to the channel margin. There were no evidences for a strong depth gradient along the sampled areas. Also, these areas were exposed to sunlight for a considerable amount of time. This procedure allowed to estimate the population density (ind./m2), biometric values of the shells and spatial distribution of A. trapesialis in the studied area. For each sampled quarter, all dead shells (i.e. without soft parts) inside the quadrats showing the two valves were identified, counted and measured (L, H and Wi) with an analogic caliper (0.05 mm) (Figs. 4 and S2). Shell fragments and buried individuals that could not be identified were disregarded and excluded from analysis.

The first quarter (I) was inserted in a grassy area (with predominance of Zoysia sp.) near to the river channel, with high content of organic matter in soil (61 g/kg) and clayey sediment (Fig. 4). The other quarters (II and III) showed longer exposure to sunlight due to lower depth in relation to the Quarter I, with a higher proportion of silt in its sediment composition and no grasses in their soil, indicating a lower amount of organic matter (20 g/kg) (L.R.P. Paschoal, personal data).

On November 2nd 2014, two years after the massive mortality event detected in Furnas HPS reservoir, a new sampling (using the same methodology) was performed to verify a recovery (or not) of the number of individuals in this population.

Data analysis

Allometric equations of Y = aXb type were adjusted for the 12 living specimens, having as independent variable (X) the shell length (L) and relating it to the other body dimensions of the animal (dependent variables, Y) (Huxley 1950HUXLEY JS. 1950. Relative growth and form transformation. Proc R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 137: 465-469.). Values of the allometric constant (b) were tested using the t test, as H0:b = 1 (or 3 in the case of weight), and used to determine the growth patterns of a specific body part in relation to L. Subsequently, the equations were linearized (Y = a * X - b).

The distribution pattern of A. trapesialis was determined using the Morisita index (IM), being random when IM = 1, aggregate when IM > 1, and uniform when IM < 1 (Krebs 1989KREBS CJ. 1989. Ecological methodology. New York: Harper & Row, 624 p.). Analyses of variance (ANOVA’s) associated with Tukey multiple comparison tests were used to verify possible differences between the mean values of density and biometric variables of A. trapesialis dead shells between the quarters.

RESULTS

The mean (± standard deviation) shell length (L) of the 12 living specimens of A. trapesialis was 121.1 ± 6.0 mm, while the shell height (H) and width (Wi) were 61.3 ± 4.1 and 37 ± 4.1 mm, respectively. The mean weight (We) of these mussels was 96.32 ± 15.17 g. The smallest individual analyzed had 113.5 mm L, 59.4 mm H, 37.5 mm Wi and 108.34 g We, while the largest animal had 133.3 mm L, 67.6 mm H, 42.6 mm Wi and 119.89 g We. Table Isummarizes the linear regressions of the morphometric data and shows allometric patterns for the analyzed body portions. It is noted that only the relationship H vs. L showed positive allometry (Table I).

Table I
Relationships between shell length (L) and morphometric variables of Anodontites trapesialis living specimens.

In field, 812 dead shells of A. trapesialis were analyzed and measured (Figs. 4 and S2). Statistically significant differences were registered in the total number of individuals obtained in the three quarters (F = 82.05, p < 0.001), as well as in the mean size of the body structures measured in mussels sampled in these quarters (F = 14.89, p < 0.001). Quarter I showed higher abundance (N = 546) and density (X¯ = 5.52 ind/m2), besides having animals with greater body proportions in its composition (X¯ = 111 mm), when compared to the other quarters (X¯ = 106 and 109 mm). In addition, the highest absolute density (22 ind/m2) recorded in this study was established in this quarter. The population of A. trapesialis that inhabited the Sapucaí River showed an aggregated distribution (IM > 1) along the sampled area, i.e. all quarters (Fig. S2 and Table II). The biomass values estimated by extrapolating a linear regression, were: 43.45, 7.21 and 12.07 kg/quarter, for Quarter 1 to 3, respectively.

Table II
Total number of shells (N), mean, minimum and maximum density (Ind/m2), distribution pattern (IM) and mean (± standard deviation) values of the analyzed biometric variables for the dead valves of Anodontites trapesialis at the three quarters analyzed.

We observed the presence of Nile tilapia Oreochromis niloticus (Linnaeus, 1758) nests near to the analyzed quarters, especially in the area of ​​Quarter I (Fig. S3). The highest shell length (L) frequencies of dead mussels measured during the study were recorded for the size classes between 100 and 124 mm (approximately 87% of the sampled dead shells), with a modal peak at the size class 110 ˫ 114mm. Few specimens were found in the lower size classes. The smallest dead mussel analyzed in field had 30.0 mm L, 12.0 mm H and 9.8 mm Wi, while the largest had 133.0 mm L, 67.7 mm H and 42.2 mm Wi (Fig. 5).

In 2014, the second field survey cannot be performed due to the abundance of shrubs and erect macrophytes of the genera Polygonum and Brachiaria (Fig. S4), indicating that area is in an initial process of terrestrial succession (Fig. 2c). The water level was not recovered; consequently, the mussels do not come back to this area. Besides that, only shell fragments were recorded among this vegetation.

Figure 5
Shell length-frequency distributions of Anodontites trapesialis dead shells (N: 812) at Furnas HPS reservoir. Values on the top of the columns are corresponded to the total number analyzed animals.

DISCUSSION

In 2012, a severe drought in Brazilian southeast region promoted a sudden change and decrease of the water levels of the reservoir analyzed here. These events have caused a great negative impact on the population of Anodontites trapesialis, evidenced by the expressive number of mussels killed by desiccation, i.e. massive mortality. Pilger & Gido (2012)PILGER TJ & GIDO KB. 2012. Variation in Unionid assemblages between streams and a reservoir within the Kansas River Basin. Am Midl Nat 167: 356-365. demonstrated that freshwater mussels were heavily affected by rapidly receding water levels. The giant mussels could not move in the same rhythm as the rapid decrease of the water column level of the Furnas reservoir, being exposed to the environment and susceptible to desiccation and predators. Cândido & Romero (2006CÂNDIDO LTS & ROMERO SMB. 2006. Heart rate and burrowing behavior in the mussel Anodontites trapesialis (Bivalvia: Mycetopodidae) from lotic and lentic sites. Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol 145: 131-136., 2007CÂNDIDO LTS & ROMERO SMB. 2007. A contribution to the knowledge of the behaviour of Anodontites trapesialis (Bivalvia: Mycetopodidae). The effect of sediment type on burrowing. Belg J Zool 137: 11-16.) demonstrated that A. trapesialis shows slow rates of burrowing, digging and displacement/locomotion. Thus, it is possible that these mussels have stranded on the sediment when exposed to drought, promoting a significant mortality in this population. This pattern is similar to that recorded for other unionoid and cirenid bivalves exposed to extreme climatic events (see Ilarri et al. 2011ILARRI MI, ANTUNES C, GUILHERMINO L & SOUSA R. 2011. Massive mortality of the Asian clam Corbicula fluminea in a highly invaded area. Biol Invasions 13: 277-280., Sousa et al. 2012SOUSA R, VARANDAS S, CORTES R, TEIXEIRA A, LOPES-LIMA M, MACHADO J & GUILHERMINO L. 2012. Massive die-offs of freshwater bivalves as resource pulses. Ann Limnol Int J Lim 48: 105-112., 2018, Bódis et al. 2014BÓDIS E, TÓTH B & SOUSA R. 2014. Massive mortality of invasive bivalves as a potential resource subsidy for the adjacent terrestrial food web. Hydrobiologia 735: 253-262., Paschoal et al. 2015PASCHOAL LRP, ANDRADE DP & DARRIGRAN G. 2015. How the fluctuations of water levels affect populations of invasive bivalve Corbicula fluminea (Müller, 1774) in a Neotropical reservoir? Braz J Biol 75: 135-143., Vaughn et al. 2015VAUGHN CC, ATKINSON CL & JULIAN JP. 2015. Drought-induced changes in flow regimes lead to long-term losses in mussel-provided ecosystem services. Ecol Evol 5: 1291-1305.).

Despite the massive mortality verified in field during the drought, it was possible to find living specimens of A. trapesialis in a small channel in the studied area. This shows how the species is capable to adapt to different environmental conditions and to survive even in hydric stress events, as pointed out by Pereira et al. (2014)PEREIRA D ET AL. 2014. Bivalve distribution in hydrographic regions in South America: historical overview and conservation. Hydrobiologia 735: 15-44.. As observed here, there are indications that the plasticity of A. trapesialis population from Furnas HPS reservoir has allowed the species to survive the water levels fluctuations, which in natural environments does not occur so quickly. Callil & Mansur (2007)CALLIL CT & MANSUR MCD. 2007. Gametogênese e dinâmica da reprodução de Anodontites trapesialis (Lamarck) (Unionoida: Mycetopodidae) no lago Baía do Poço, planície de inundação do rio Cuiabá, Mato Grosso. Zoologia 24: 825-840. and Callil et al. (2018)CALLIL CT, LEITE MC, MATEUS LA & JONES JW. 2018. Influence of the flood pulse on reproduction and growth of Anodontites trapesialis (Lamarck, 1819) (Bivalvia: Mycetopodidae) in the Pantanal wetland, Brazil. Hydrobiologia 810: 433-448. confirmed that the reproductive cycle of A. trapesialis, as well as the energy allocation for growth of this mussel in the Pantanal wetlands are directly related to the hydrological cycle imposed by flood pulses. In this way, future studies are necessary to verify if the population analyzed in this reservoir maintains the pattern of body increment and reproductive peak influenced by higher water levels or if it is capable to reproduce and maintain constant sizes over time, as registered for Corbicula fluminea (Müller, 1774) in the same reservoir by Paschoal et al. (2015)PASCHOAL LRP, ANDRADE DP & DARRIGRAN G. 2015. How the fluctuations of water levels affect populations of invasive bivalve Corbicula fluminea (Müller, 1774) in a Neotropical reservoir? Braz J Biol 75: 135-143..

The population of A. trapesialis analyzed invests energy for longitudinal shell growth. This is probably related to the growth of the foot and demibranches as the shell increases. A large foot would optimize the time spent in burrowing events and improve the anchorage of animals that inhabit clayey sediments (Cândido & Romero 2006CÂNDIDO LTS & ROMERO SMB. 2006. Heart rate and burrowing behavior in the mussel Anodontites trapesialis (Bivalvia: Mycetopodidae) from lotic and lentic sites. Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol 145: 131-136., 2007CÂNDIDO LTS & ROMERO SMB. 2007. A contribution to the knowledge of the behaviour of Anodontites trapesialis (Bivalvia: Mycetopodidae). The effect of sediment type on burrowing. Belg J Zool 137: 11-16.). In field and laboratory, it was observed that large mussels were capable to bury and escape faster than smaller animals (LRP Paschoal personal data). Additionally, Callil et al. (2018)CALLIL CT, LEITE MC, MATEUS LA & JONES JW. 2018. Influence of the flood pulse on reproduction and growth of Anodontites trapesialis (Lamarck, 1819) (Bivalvia: Mycetopodidae) in the Pantanal wetland, Brazil. Hydrobiologia 810: 433-448. have shown that fecundity in A. trapesialis is directly proportional to the size of the mussel, where large animals have higher offspring than smaller individuals. In the analyzed reservoir, it is likely that large animals had more chances to escape the desiccation by burying and taking advantage of moist microhabitats, making these mussels more suitable for reproduction.

Anodontites trapesialis showed an aggregation behavior with high density along the stretch analyzed in the study area. The most common spatial distribution in bivalves is the aggregate. This is due to the environmental heterogeneity of the area, in which bivalves group in microenvironments more suitable for their lifestyle (Santos et al. 2012SANTOS SB, THIENGO SC, FERNANDEZ MA, MIYAHIRA IC, GONÇALVES IB, XIMENES RDF, MANSUR MCD & PEREIRA D. 2012. Espécies de moluscos límnicos invasores no Brasil. In: Mansur MCD, Santos CP, Pereira D, Paz ICP, Zurita MLL, Rodriguez MTR, Nehrke MV and Bergonci PEA (Eds), Moluscos límnicos invasores no Brasil: biologia, prevenção e controle. Redes Editora: Porto Alegre, p. 25-50., Paschoal et al. 2015PASCHOAL LRP, ANDRADE DP & DARRIGRAN G. 2015. How the fluctuations of water levels affect populations of invasive bivalve Corbicula fluminea (Müller, 1774) in a Neotropical reservoir? Braz J Biol 75: 135-143.). Few studies evaluated the population density of Anodontites mussels in Neotropical reservoirs. Nascimento-Filho et al. (2014)NASCIMENTO-FILHO SL, VIANA GFS & GOMES RLM. 2014. Inventário da malacofauna límnica de três grandes reservatórios do sertão de Pernambuco, Brasil. Scientia Plena 10: 1-7. recorded a density up to 1 ind/m2 for A. trapesialis in the Serrinha reservoir (Pernambuco state, northeastern Brazil). Henry & Simão (1986)HENRY R & SIMÃO CA. 1986. Abundância, diversidade e biomassa de Mollusca na represa de Piraju (rio Paranapanema, SP). Rev Bras Biol 46: 507-516. registered a density of up to 0.02 ind/m2 for the congener A. trapezeus (Spix in Wagner, 1827) in the Piraju reservoir (São Paulo state, southeastern Brazil). These values are significantly lower than those recorded in the present study. This is possibly due to the difficulty of collecting these mussels, since these animals live buried in deep substrates (up to 15 m) and have large body sizes, which makes it difficult to obtain individuals by conventional collection devices such as nets and suction or grab samplers (SEMA 2013SEMA - SECRETÁRIA ESTADUAL DO MEIO AMBIENTE. 2013. Ficha de Informações para Avaliação da espécie. Anodontites trapesialis Lamarck, 1819. In: Oficina de avaliação do estado de conservação dos Invertebrados Marinhos da Bahia. Secretária Estadual do Meio Ambiente: Ilhéus, p. 01.).

Several ecological factors influence the distribution of mollusks and among them the substrate is a determinant factor in the distribution of freshwater bivalves (Harman 1972HARMAN WN. 1972. Benthic substrates: their effect on freshwater Mollusca. Ecology 53: 271-277., Serrano et al. 1998SERRANO MAS, TIETBÖHL RS & MANSUR MCD. 1998. Sobre a ocorrência de moluscos bivalves no Pantanal de Mato Grosso, Brasil. Biociências 6: 131-144., Paschoal et al. 2015PASCHOAL LRP, ANDRADE DP & DARRIGRAN G. 2015. How the fluctuations of water levels affect populations of invasive bivalve Corbicula fluminea (Müller, 1774) in a Neotropical reservoir? Braz J Biol 75: 135-143.). This characteristic was observed in the present study, since significant differences were observed for the three quarters, in which only the first one differed from the others. The area occupied by Quarter I was composed of clayey substrate and showed evidences of high concentration of organic matter and abundance of Nile tilapia, since this area was fully covered by grass and showed several nests of tilapia. An explanation for this distribution pattern and higher density, biomass and body proportions of A. trapesialis in the area of ​​Quarter I would be given by the synergy of some factors: (I) the clayey substrate (i.e. fine particles) of this area would aid the colonization and burrowing process of these mussels (Pereira et al. 2000PEREIRA D, VEITENHEIMER-MENDES IL, MANSUR MCD & SILVA MCP. 2000. Malacofauna límnica no sistema de irrigação da microbacia do arroio Capivara, Triunfo, RS, Brasil. Biociências 8: 137-157., Cândido & Romero 2006CÂNDIDO LTS & ROMERO SMB. 2006. Heart rate and burrowing behavior in the mussel Anodontites trapesialis (Bivalvia: Mycetopodidae) from lotic and lentic sites. Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol 145: 131-136., 2007), thus avoiding predation and desiccation, (II) due to the fact of the species is a suspension feeder that preferably inhabits regions of lower river flow with high amounts of phytoplankton (food resource) and organic matter (Simone 1994SIMONE LRL. 1994. Anatomical characters and systematics of Anodontites trapesialis (Lamarck, 1819) from South America (Mollusca, Bivalvia, Unionoida, Muteloidea). Stud Neotrop Fauna E 29: 169-185., Pereira et al. 2011PEREIRA D, ARRUDA JO, MENEGAT R, PORTO ML, SCHWARZBOLD A & HARTZ SM. 2011. Guildas tróficas, composição e distribuição de espécies de moluscos límnicos no gradiente fluvial de um riacho subtropical brasileiro. Biotemas 24: 21-36.), these environmental features were observed in the studied area when not exposed to the drought [see Paschoal et al. (2015)PASCHOAL LRP, ANDRADE DP & DARRIGRAN G. 2015. How the fluctuations of water levels affect populations of invasive bivalve Corbicula fluminea (Müller, 1774) in a Neotropical reservoir? Braz J Biol 75: 135-143. and Brito et al. (2016)BRITO SL, MAIA-BARBOSA PM & PINTO-COELHO RM. 2016. Secondary productivity of main microcrustacean species of two tropical reservoirs in Brazil and its relationship with trophic state. J Limnol 75: 320-329.], and (III) the presence and possible use of the non-native fish O. niloticus as hosts for its larvae (Guardia-Felipi & Silva-Souza 2008GUARDIA-FELIPI P & SILVA-SOUZA AT. 2008. Anodontites trapesialis (Lamarck, 1819): um bivalve parasito de peixes de água doce. Semina: Ciências Agrárias 29: 895-904.), since we detected several dead shells near to the tilapia nests.

Large adult individuals1 1 Here, we considered mature mussels all animals with > 47 mm L (size at the onset of physiological maturity, sensu Callil & Mansur 2007). Mussels with small shells (< 47 mm L) were considered immature individuals. (100 ˫ 124 mm L) were more common during the analysis of massive mortality in the A. trapesialis population, while juveniles were rarely observed. Bódis et al. (2014)BÓDIS E, TÓTH B & SOUSA R. 2014. Massive mortality of invasive bivalves as a potential resource subsidy for the adjacent terrestrial food web. Hydrobiologia 735: 253-262. when evaluating the massive mortality of bivalves along the Danube River Basin (Hungary) caused by drought, verified that the individuals of the Chinese pond mussel Sinanodonta woodiana (Lea, 1834) with a size range of 60 ˫ 180 mm L were the animals more affected. Semenas & Brugni (2002)SEMENAS L & BRUGNI N. 2002. Características poblacionales y ciclo de vida de Diplodon chilensis (d’Orbigny, 1835) (Hyriidae, Bivalvia) en el lago Gutiérrez (Patagonia, Argentina). Ecol Austral 12: 29-40. suggest that the size distribution of bivalves in limnic environments is modulated by depth, and that smaller animals inhabit deeper areas. Thus, it is possible that juveniles of A. trapesialis may not be affected as large adults when water levels decrease because they inhabit deeper areas.

In 2014, a new survey was carried out to verify if the population presented or not recovery in the number of individuals. However, it was not possible to be performed due to the abundance of vegetation in the initial stage of terrestrial succession at the sampled area (Fig. S4), showing that the flooded area of Furnas reservoir did not recover from the drought (Fig. 2). As verified by Bódis et al. (2014)BÓDIS E, TÓTH B & SOUSA R. 2014. Massive mortality of invasive bivalves as a potential resource subsidy for the adjacent terrestrial food web. Hydrobiologia 735: 253-262., the massive mortality of bivalves promotes the input of nutrients and biomass into the area where it occurs, increasing nutrient concentration and, consequently, primary productivity. In the analyzed area, the concentration of organic matter in sediment increased between two to six times (128 g/kg) after the massive mortality. In addition, dead shells probably increased calcium concentration in the analyzed area (0.76 g/kg Ca), since nearby areas without A. trapesialis had concentrations of this element, three times lower (~ 0.25 g/kg Ca) (L.R.P. Paschoal, personal data). This shows that the shells can persist in the environment, providing calcium and nutrients that will be incorporated into the sediment (Strayer & Malcom 2007STRAYER DL & MALCOM HM. 2007. Shell decay rates of native and alien freshwater bivalves and implications for habitat engineering. Freshwater Biol 52: 1611-1617.). It can be noted that this phenomenon promoted an ecological impact in the analyzed area, altering the environmental scenario of the reservoir. Future studies should be carried out in this area, in order to verify how nutrient and calcium cycling occur from dead shells and how the ecological succession will impact the reservoir after the flooding and reestablishment of the normal water column levels.

The habitat modification promoted by dams (i.e. water level control) associated with climatic changes may restrict populations of A. trapesialis and should be faced as an ecological problem, since it is considered one of the causes of bivalve extinction (Bogan 1993BOGAN AE. 1993. Freshwater bivalve extinctions (Mollusca: Unionoida): a search for causes. Am Zool 33: 599-609., Haag & Williams 2014HAAG WR & WILLIAMS JD. 2014. Biodiversity on the brink: an assessment of conservation strategies for North American freshwater mussels. Hydrobiologia 735: 45-60.). The present study shows the first record of massive mortality of native bivalves in South America promoted by synergic events. A management proposal for A. trapesialis and other mussels, would be the relocation of these bivalves to nearby deeper areas with perennial and resident water, aiming the conservation and maintenance of these native species. We suggest monitoring of the populations and verification of the effectiveness of the adopted measures, being the responsibility of the competent organs the adoption of mitigating measures. In addition, it was observed in field the coexistence of the giant freshwater mussel to the Asian clam C. fluminea (L.R.P. Paschoal, personal observation). This invasive species has the capacity to alter the environment that inhabits and is capable to displace native species. Moreover, when exposed to climatic disturbances it shows a fast recovery and can overlap and repel native species in the same area of ​​occurrence (Sousa et al. 2008SOUSA R, ANTUNES C & GUILHERMINO L. 2008. Ecology of the invasive Asian clam Corbicula fluminea (Müller, 1774) in aquatic ecosystems: an overview. Ann Limnol Int J Lim 44: 85-94., Paschoal et al. 2015PASCHOAL LRP, ANDRADE DP & DARRIGRAN G. 2015. How the fluctuations of water levels affect populations of invasive bivalve Corbicula fluminea (Müller, 1774) in a Neotropical reservoir? Braz J Biol 75: 135-143.). Until now, seven non-native species of mollusks were registered in reservoirs of Brazilian basins (Pereira et al. 2018PEREIRA LS, NEVES RDAF, MIYAHIRA IC, KOZLOWSKY-SUZUKI B, BRANCO CWC, PAULA JC & SANTOS LN. 2018. Non-native species in reservoirs: how are we doing in Brazil? Hydrobiologia 817: 71-84.). These authors suggested that invasive species can promote a drastic reduction of native mollusk populations, so an increased attention should be given to the monitoring of the A. trapesialis population that inhabits this reservoir.

The development of conservation strategies for bivalves faces challenges, including the lack of quantitative data and/or assessments, selection of priority species and populations for conservation, strategic decisions on habitat restoration and propagation in captivity, as well as the participation of academic, governmental and general public (Régnier et al. 2009RÉGNIER C, FONTAINE B & BOUCHET P. 2009. Not knowing, not recording, not listing: numerous unnoticed mollusk extinctions. Conserv Biol 23: 1214-1221., Santos et al. 2013SANTOS SB, MIYAHIRA IC & MANSUR MCD. 2013. Freshwater and terrestrial molluscs in Brasil: current status of knowledge and conservation. Tentacle 21: 40-42., Lopes-Lima et al. 2017LOPES-LIMA M ET AL. 2017. Conservation status of freshwater mussels in Europe: state of the art and future challenges. Biol Rev 92: 572-607., Torres et al. 2018TORRES S, CAO L, GUTIERREZ GREGORIC D, DE LUCIA M, BREA F & DARRIGRAN G. 2018. Distribution of the Unionida (Bivalvia, Paleoheterodonta) from Argentina and its conservation in the Southern Neotropical Region. PLoS ONE 13: 1-15.). Thus, future studies related to temporal changes in the patterns of transitional environments are of extreme importance, since the bivalves are also a faunal group with a high rate of extinction (Baillie et al. 2004BAILLIE JEM, HILTON-TAYLOR C & STUART SN. 2004. 2004 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. A Global Species Assessment. United Kingdom: IUCN, 191 p., Lydeard et al. 2004LYDEARD C ET AL. 2004. The global decline of nonmarine mollusks. BioScience 54: 321-330.), as well as the mycetopodids (Pereira et al. 2012PEREIRA D, MANSUR MCD & PIMPÃO DM. 2012. Identificação e diferenciação dos bivalves límnicos invasores dos demais bivalves nativos do Brasil. In: Mansur MCD, Santos CP, Pereira D, Paz ICP, Zurita MLL, Rodriguez MTR, Nehrke MV and Bergonci PEA (Eds), Moluscos límnicos invasores no Brasil: biologia, prevenção e controle. Redes Editora: Porto Alegre, p. 75-94.). The results presented here described the effects of extreme climatic events in Neotropical reservoirs, creating a basis for future studies on ecology and conservation of freshwater native bivalves.

ACKNOWLEGMENTS

We thank Dr. Luiz Simone (MZSP) for confirming species identification, Biologists Deivid P. Andrade and Thainá D. Franco for helping with field work, Dr. Norival França for packing and shipment of the voucher samples to MZSP, and Dr. Valter M. Azevedo-Santos for helping with field work, identification of tilapia nests and for his comments which significantly improved this paper. GD and ST thank FCNyM (UNLP11/N927) and CONICET for the support. We are extremely thankful to the anonymous reviewers that greatly improved the manuscript with relevant suggestions.

  • 1
    Here, we considered mature mussels all animals with > 47 mm L (size at the onset of physiological maturity, sensu Callil & Mansur 2007CALLIL CT & MANSUR MCD. 2007. Gametogênese e dinâmica da reprodução de Anodontites trapesialis (Lamarck) (Unionoida: Mycetopodidae) no lago Baía do Poço, planície de inundação do rio Cuiabá, Mato Grosso. Zoologia 24: 825-840.). Mussels with small shells (< 47 mm L) were considered immature individuals.

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    07 Sept 2020
  • Date of issue
    2020

History

  • Received
    7 Aug 2018
  • Accepted
    7 May 2019
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