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Keywords = freshwater bivalve mollusk shells

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11 pages, 2999 KiB  
Review
Herbert D. Athearn and the Museum of Fluviatile Mollusks
by Arthur E. Bogan, Jamie M. Smith and Cynthia M. Bogan
Diversity 2025, 17(4), 284; https://doi.org/10.3390/d17040284 - 18 Apr 2025
Viewed by 237
Abstract
Herbert D. Athearn (1923–2011) was an avid student of freshwater mollusks. He named his private shell collection “The Museum of Fluviatile Mollusks”, which was meticulously organized at his residence. This collection was curated to current museum standards with detailed labels, all lots with [...] Read more.
Herbert D. Athearn (1923–2011) was an avid student of freshwater mollusks. He named his private shell collection “The Museum of Fluviatile Mollusks”, which was meticulously organized at his residence. This collection was curated to current museum standards with detailed labels, all lots with catalog numbers, and all unionoid valves with catalog numbers written in India ink. Specimens’ collecting dates span between 1850 and 2005, with 23,344 cataloged lots containing over 3000 lots of imperiled and extinct taxa. All data for each of the lots are handwritten in paper catalogs. Many lots contain growth series from the smallest juveniles to the largest specimens seen. He traded extensively with collectors worldwide, obtaining specimens from 84 countries. This collection was donated to the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences in 2007. To date, 64 percent of this collection has been databased using a relational database, totaling 589,995 specimens. The collection consists of bivalves, primarily Unionidae, Margaritiferidae, and Sphaeriidae, as well as gastropods. There are 73 families represented, with the greatest abundance found in freshwater Pleuroceridae. The Athearn collection donation included his correspondence, his library, field notes, and USGS topographic maps with marked field localities. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Ecology and Conservation of Freshwater Mollusks)
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27 pages, 3980 KiB  
Article
Trace Element Patterns in Shells of Mussels (Bivalvia) Allow to Distinguish between Fresh- and Brackish-Water Coastal Environments of the Subarctic and Boreal Zone
by Artem A. Lyubas, Irina A. Kuznetsova, Galina V. Bovykina, Tatyana A. Eliseeva, Mikhail Yu. Gofarov, Irina S. Khrebtova, Alexander V. Kondakov, Alexey V. Malkov, Vasileios Mavromatis, Alexander R. Shevchenko, Alena A. Soboleva, Oleg S. Pokrovsky and Ivan N. Bolotov
Water 2023, 15(20), 3625; https://doi.org/10.3390/w15203625 - 16 Oct 2023
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 3065
Abstract
The accumulation of trace metals in the shells of bivalves allows quantitative assessments of environmental pollution and helps to reconstruct paleo aquatic environments. However, the understanding on how marine and freshwater mollusks control the level of trace elements in their shells remains very [...] Read more.
The accumulation of trace metals in the shells of bivalves allows quantitative assessments of environmental pollution and helps to reconstruct paleo aquatic environments. However, the understanding on how marine and freshwater mollusks control the level of trace elements in their shells remains very limited. Here, we compared the trace element composition of marine and freshwater bivalves from boreal and subarctic habitats, using examples of widely distributed species of marine (Mytilus edulis, M. trossulus) and freshwater (Anodonta anatina, Unio sp., Beringiana beringiana) mussels. Sizable differences in several trace element concentrations were detected between different species, depending on their environmental niches. A multiparametric statistical treatment of the shell’s elemental composition allowed to distinguish the impact of external factors (water and sediment chemical composition) from active metabolic (biological) control. In particular, the obtained results demonstrated that Ba:Ca and Pb:Ca ratios in mussels’ shells are closely related to the primary productivity of aquatic ecosystems. The Mn:Ca ratio allowed to constrain the environmental conditions of mussels’ species depending on the trophic state of inhabited waterbody. Overall, the marine mussels exhibited stronger biological control of trace element accumulation, whereas trace element pattern in shells of freshwater mussels was chiefly controlled by environmental factors. The obtained results might help to use the trace element composition of bivalves in distinguishing marine and freshwater habitats of mollusks in paleo environments. Full article
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34 pages, 7272 KiB  
Review
Shellfish as Biosensors in Online Monitoring of Aquatic Ecosystems: A Review of Russian Studies
by Alexander G. Dvoretsky and Vladimir G. Dvoretsky
Fishes 2023, 8(2), 102; https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes8020102 - 8 Feb 2023
Cited by 16 | Viewed by 7671
Abstract
The use of biological objects in monitoring the state of the environment and the changes caused by the impact of environmental pollution on marine and fresh waters is a promising tool due to a lower cost in comparison to traditional monitoring and the [...] Read more.
The use of biological objects in monitoring the state of the environment and the changes caused by the impact of environmental pollution on marine and fresh waters is a promising tool due to a lower cost in comparison to traditional monitoring and the ability to receive immediate information about the ecosystem status. In this review, we summarize the biological information about shellfish biomonitors and the results of studies focused on the development and use of the bioindicator species in early warning systems in Russia. Since the mid-1980s, Russian specialists have developed online biomonitoring systems; as in the rest of world, there are two main approaches that are currently applied to study the physiological status of potential biosensor shellfish species and to monitor freshwater and marine systems: valvometry (registration of gaping activity in bivalve mollusks) and photoplethysmography (registration of cardiac activity in mollusks and crustaceans). Valve movement responses to stressors such as abnormal conditions and pollutants include the closure of shell valves for a long period, decrease in the average distance between valves, rapid shell opening, and higher closing frequency. Cardiac activity reactions of shellfish to stress factors include rapid increases in heart rate and stress index, higher variability in heart rate than under normal conditions, and longer periods required for heart rate recovery after stress. The most common bioindicators used to monitor environmental disturbances in marine ecosystems are blue mussels, Iceland scallops, and red king crabs in cold-water habitats and Black Sea mussels in warmer waters as well as freshwater mussels and crayfish in fresh waters. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Response of Aquatic Animals to Environmental Changes)
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11 pages, 12822 KiB  
Article
Global Crystallographic Texture of Freshwater Bivalve Mollusks of the Unionidae Family from Eastern Europe Studied by Neutron Diffraction
by Alexey Pakhnevich, Dmitry Nikolayev, Tatiana Lychagina, Maria Balasoiu and Orhan Ibram
Life 2022, 12(5), 730; https://doi.org/10.3390/life12050730 - 13 May 2022
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 2020
Abstract
The crystallographic texture of the whole valves of bivalve mollusks from the family Unionidae Unio pictorum Linnaeus, 1758 and Anodonta cygnea Linnaeus, 1758 is studied using pole figures measured using neutron diffraction. The use of neutron diffraction, in contrast to X-rays, makes it [...] Read more.
The crystallographic texture of the whole valves of bivalve mollusks from the family Unionidae Unio pictorum Linnaeus, 1758 and Anodonta cygnea Linnaeus, 1758 is studied using pole figures measured using neutron diffraction. The use of neutron diffraction, in contrast to X-rays, makes it possible to study the valves without destroying them. Thus, we can discuss the study of the global texture of the entire valve. It was revealed that the pole figures of aragonite in the valves repeat their shape. The pole density maxima for U. pictorum from the Danube Delta and the Gulf of Finland in the Baltic Sea, living at different salinities and temperatures, differs by 0.41 mrd. The maximum value of the crystallographic texture for A. cygnea from the Danube Delta was also measured (5.07 mrd). In terms of texture sharpness, it surpasses the shell of marine bivalve mollusks, which are partially or completely composed of aragonite. Although U. pictorum and Mya arenaria Linnaeus, 1758 have different microstructures, their pole figures are very similar in isolines pattern, but differ in pole density maxima. No relationship was found between the crystallographic texture and the microstructure in U. pictorum. In addition, we report good qualitative agreement between aragonite X-ray pole figures of Sinanodonta woodiana Lea, 1834 from the Czech river Luznice, and neutron pole figures of U. pictorum from the Danube Delta. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Animal Science)
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