
11-30-2006, 01:03 AM
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 | Admin & Pearl Maven Senior Pearl-Guide.com Pearl Expert | | Join Date: Dec 2004 Location: Southern Arizona
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Part 2 of above article: Quote: With your face or bucket close to the stream bottom, familiarize yourself with your aquatic surroundings. Watch for the slightest movements. Perhaps you'll see a puff of sand or silt. Where did it come from? Look closer. If it's a freshwater mussel, the first thing you'll notice are the two siphons extending from between the shell valves. If you reach out and touch it, a live mussel will quickly clamp shut. They are sensitive to shadows and will react as if you are a predator about to eat them. You can pick up a live mussel without hurting it if you treat it with care. They are so interesting and beautiful, it's hard to resist. Note its shell patterns and long foot as you pull the mussel from the stream bottom. What color is it? The part of the shell where the foot is can be thought of as the "head" (anterior) end. Actually, mussels do not have a head. Instead, they have a long muscular foot that protrudes from their protective house-of-shell. The mussel walks through the substrate with its foot. The siphons are located at the rear (posterior) end and are sometimes visible sticking out of the substrate. When replacing the mussel, rebury the foot end. If you accidentally rebury the siphon end, instead, you could suffocate the mussel. If unsure, leave the mussel close by in the same habitat, on its side, behind a boulder or in quiet water and let it rebury itself. If left unburied in swift current, it can easily be swept away to unfavorable habitat. Be sure to always put mussels back where you found them. A number of Missouri's freshwater mussels are hard to identify. Nevertheless, with a little practice you can learn to identify the more common species near your own home. Shells of freshly dead mussels, picked clean and discarded in a pile by a muskrat or raccoon, are the best to start with. Some features to inspect include shape and thickness of shell, color of the shell exterior and interior, presence of bumps, pustules or ridges on the shell exterior and shape and size of internal teeth. A good reference book is Missouri Naiades: A Guide to the Mussels of Missouri by Ronald D. Oesch (Copyright 1984, 1995). This manual contains excellent line drawings and detailed descriptions of each species. It is available from Nature Shop, Missouri Department of Conservation, P.O. Box 180, Jefferson City, Missouri 65102-0180 for $6. Shipping and handling is $2. Missouri residents must include 6.225 percent sales tax. Feeding and reproduction The bulk of a freshwater mussel consists of a long muscular foot that contracts and withdraws into its shell if pulled from the substrate. On either side of the foot is a pair of thin, specialized gills that allow the mussel to breathe and filter-feed. Water is drawn into the body or mantle cavity through the incurrent siphon and passes over the gills, which extract critical oxygen and food (algae and fine particles of decaying organic matter). While food travels to the mussel's stomach, sediment and undigested wastes travel and exit the body through its excurrent siphon. Upon exiting, these "pseudofeces" are in a form other aquatic animals can eat. Freshwater mussels have a complex life cycle in which the larval stage is parasitic on a host, typically a fish. During the breeding season, males release sperm into the water, which enter the female via her incurrent siphon and fertilize her eggs. Her modified gills serve as a brooding chamber for developing embryos that mature into larvae called glochidia (glo-kid-ee-ah). Glochidia, which have specialized teeth or hooks on the inside of their microscopic shells, are often contained in a gelatinous packet called a conglutinate, which takes on a shape and size unique to each mussel species. Various mussel species have unique tactics for attracting particular host fishes that share their same habitat. The mantle flap of female pocketbooks, for example, mimics a young fish. She contracts this "lure" to draw the attention of a nearby bass, its host. When the bass attempts to eat the "fish," it gets a mouthful of glochidia! The glochidia attach to the fish's gills, (which usually doesn't harm the fish) become encysted, develop into juveniles and then drop to the stream bottom. If they land in suitable habitat, they will grow into adults and repeat the cycle. If they land in poor habitat, they will die. Similarly, if glochidia fail to encounter a specific host fish, they will not develop vital organs and slough from the fish and die. |
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Caitlin My Private Mail box gets full too fast, so please send feedback, comments, and questions to caitlin @ pearl-guide .com. (connect the parts first) potamilus purpuratus American Pearl Mussel Where can I get a pearl from this mussel? |