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Showing papers on "Blue mussel published in 2008"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that ocean acidification may impact the physiological condition and functionality of the haemocytes and could have a significant effect on cellular signalling pathways, particularly those pathways that rely on specific concentrations of calcium, and so may be disrupted by calcium carbonate shell dissolution.
Abstract: The effects of medium term (32 d) hypercapnia on the immune response of Mytilus edulis were investigated in mussels exposed to acidified (using CO2) sea water (pH 7.7, 7.5 or 6.7; control: pH 7.8). Levels of phagocytosis increased significantly during the exposure period, suggest- ing an immune response induced by the experimental set-up. However, this induced stress response was suppressed when mussels were exposed to acidified sea water. Acidified sea water did not have any significant effects on other immuno-surveillance parameters measured (superoxide anion pro- duction, total and differential cell counts). These results suggest that ocean acidification may impact the physiological condition and functionality of the haemocytes and could have a significant effect on cellular signalling pathways, particularly those pathways that rely on specific concentrations of calcium, and so may be disrupted by calcium carbonate shell dissolution.

248 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that a shift in dominance from mussels to oysters alters habitat structures which entail differential abundances of associated organisms, indicating interactive effects of both bivalves on sediment characteristics.

134 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evidence of lipid peroxidation, similar to the detoxification pathway described for various xenobiotics, was found; insoluble lipofuchsin granules formed, and hemocytes carried the granules to the alimentary canal, thus eliminating putative dinoflagellate toxins in feces.

112 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This experiment demonstrated that M. edulis is affected by ingestion of toxic P. minimum; however, the specific responses observed in the blue mussel differed from those reported for other bivalve species, which highlights the need to study effects of HABs on different bivalves.

85 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that large macroinvertebrates and benthic fishes, including ecologically and commercially important species, seem to respond positively to the presence of suspended mussel culture.
Abstract: Bivalve aquaculture can influence coastal marine ecosystems by increasing organic material deposition, which, in turn, can have multiple direct and indirect effects on the surrounding benthic community We assessed the influence of blue mussel Mytilus edulis aquaculture on the epibenthic macrofauna at 4 sites in Prince Edward Island, eastern Canada The abundance of macroinvertebrates and benthic fishes (>2 cm) was evaluated by visual counts using SCUBA within 4 mussel aquaculture facilities (‘farms’) and at locations at distances of 50, 100, 500 and 2000 m outside of them in June, August and November 2005 Benthic assemblages were dominated by seastars Asterias sp (79%), rock crabs Cancer irroratus (8%), mud crabs Neopanope sayi (6%), moon snails Lunatia heros (2%), winter flounders Pleuronectes americanus (2%), American lobsters Homarus americanus (1%) and hermit crabs Pagarus sp (1%) Although there was great variability among sites and sampling dates, mussel aquaculture had a clear effect on total abundance, which was generally greater within farms than at distances outside of them These increases in abundance were mainly associated with increased numbers of seastars and rock crabs Taxonomic richness and evenness differed among some mussel farms and distances outside of mussel farms, but there were no clear trends that suggested a negative influence of mussel aquaculture Multivariate analyses indicated that communities within mussel farms differed from those at corresponding communities at distances outside of farms, but that the taxa that contributed to these differences varied among farms Taxonomic assemblages for a specific farm and date were generally similar among distances outside of farms and increases in the abundance of epibenthic macrofauna appeared to be largely restricted to the immediate vicinity of mussel farms, ie <50 m This increase in abundance probably reflected the attraction of mobile fauna due to increased food supply and possibly to the creation of a more heterogeneous habitat These results suggest that large macroinvertebrates and benthic fishes, including ecologically and commercially important species, seem to respond positively to the presence of suspended mussel culture

73 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results demonstrate long-term human enteropathogen contamination of Irish waters with consequent public-health risk factors for drinking-water abstraction and water-based activities.
Abstract: Surface inland and coastal waters in Ireland were surveyed for the human waterborne enteropathogens; Cryptosporidium parvum, Giardia lamblia, Encephalitozoon intestinalis, Encephalitozoon hellem, and Enterocytozoon bieneusi by utilizing bivalve mussel species, i.e., Mytilus edulis (blue mussel), Anodonta anatina (duck ‘mussel’, actually a unionid clam), and the invasive Dreissena polymorpha (zebra mussel) as biomonitors at twelve sites located in three Irish river-basin districts with various water-quality pressures. Biomolecular techniques were utilized to assess the presence and concentration of these pathogens. At least one pathogen species was detected in shellfish at each site. Cryptosporidium, implicated in several recent Irish gastrointestinal epidemics, was recorded at all sites subjected to agricultural runoff and at one sewage discharge site, linking source-track directly to human and animal fecal wastes. G. lamblia was present at eleven of the twelve sites in a range of concentrations. A coastal bay with raw urban sewage discharge was 100% positive for all analyzed enteropathogens. Overall, the results demonstrate long-term human enteropathogen contamination of Irish waters with consequent public-health risk factors for drinking-water abstraction and water-based activities.

71 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
15 Jun 2008-Toxicon
TL;DR: There appears overall a moderate likelihood of occurrence of AZAs in the range that may be relevant to consumers, and the finding of low levels ofAZAs since 2002 suggests a low risk level when compared with the highest risks posed by diarrhetic shellfish poisoning (DSP) and paralytic shell fish poisoning (PSP) toxins.

61 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Mussels were analysed from 20 locations on Irish coasts, using the Me15/16 nuclear DNA marker, and showed a high frequency of M. galloprovincialis and hybrid genotypes and no apparent advantage for the M. edulis genotype at wave-protected sites, indicating no apparent change in the genetic composition of mussels on Atlantic coasts since the early 1980s.
Abstract: The blue mussel, Mytilus edulis, and the Mediterranean mussel, Mytilus galloprovincialis, occur widely over much of northern Europe, and wherever they are sympatric they hybridize. The hybrid zone is large, ranging from western France to the north of Scotland, and is spatially complex, containing a mixture of pure, hybrid and introgressed individuals. Results from an Irish study in 1981, using partially diagnostic allozyme markers, indicated that mussels on the Irish Sea coast were solely M. edulis, but on Atlantic wave-exposed shores, and to a much lesser extent on wave-protected shores, mussels comprised an interbreeding mixture of M. edulis and M. galloprovincialis. In this study mussels were analysed from 20 locations on Irish coasts, using the Me15/16 nuclear DNA marker. The results showed a high frequency of M. galloprovincialis (0.378 ± 0.198) and hybrid (0.429 ± 0.175) genotypes, and correspondingly low frequencies of the M. edulis genotype (0.194 ± 0.107) at both exposed and sheltered locations on Atlantic coasts, indicating no apparent advantage for the M. edulis genotype at wave-protected sites. Mytilus galloprovincialis was virtually absent from the Irish Sea. Mussels in this area may be a self-recruiting population of M. edulis due to thermal front development at the northern and southern entrances to the Irish Sea in late spring, thereby preventing an influx of spring-spawned Mytilus larvae. The apparent change in the genetic composition of mussels on Atlantic coasts since the early 1980s could be related to climate change, or to aquaculture practice in Ireland whereby mussels from exposed shores are used to seed ropes in wave-protected bays and estuaries.

46 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Macrozoobenthos communities in the North Sea showed pronounced changes over the past decade in relation to an increasing number of invasive species and climate change, and a change in the dominance structure in the associated community comparing 1984 to mid-1990s with the period from 1999 to 2005 was observed.
Abstract: Macrozoobenthos communities in the North Sea showed pronounced changes over the past decade in relation to an increasing number of invasive species and climate change. We analysed data sets spanning 22 years on abundance, biomass and species composition of intertidal soft bottom mussel beds near the island of Sylt (German Bight) in the Northern Wadden Sea, based on surveys from 1983/1984, 1990, 1993 and from 1999 to 2005. Mussel bed area and blue mussel biomass decreased, and a change in the dominance structure in the associated community comparing 1984 to mid-1990s with the period from 1999 to 2005 was observed. Coverage of the mussel beds with the algae Fucus vesiculosus decreased since the end of the 1990s. Within the study period biomass and densities of the associated community increased significantly. Dominance structure changed mainly because of increasing abundances of associated epibenthic taxa. Apart from the Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas all other alien species were already present in the area during the study period. Community changes already started before Pacific oysters became abundant. An attempt is made to evaluate effects on the observed changes of decreasing mussel biomass, ageing of mussel beds, decreasing fucoid coverage and increasing abundances of invader. All four factors are assumed to contribute to changing community structure of intertidal mussel beds.

43 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results suggest a misidentification or outgrowth of the original CCAP strain 216/18 by a different 'Nannochloris-like' trebouxiophycean organism, which could represent the true C. parasitica responsible for the green pustules in blue mussels.
Abstract: Blue mussels Mytilus edulis with shell deformations and green pustules containing par- asitic algae were collected at 3 coastal sites (Buroy, Norway; Bockholm, Denmark; Goose Green, Falkland Islands). A comparative study, including mussel histopathology, algal morphology, ultra- structure and phylogenetic position was performed. Green pustules were mainly located in the pos- terior portion of the mantle and gonad tissues and the posterior adductor muscle. Electron microscopy confirmed the presence of algal cells with similar morphology to Coccomyxa parasitica. Algae were oval shaped with a single nucleus and chloroplast, 1 or 2 mitochondria and a dense granular cyto- plasm with a lipid inclusion body, Golgi apparatus and small vesicles. Partial small subunit (SSU) rRNA phylogeny confirmed the inclusion of parasitic algae into the Coccomyxa clade. However, the sequence identity between almost full SSU rRNA sequences of parasitic algae and others in this clade yielded an unexpected result. Green algae from mussels were distant from C. parasitica Culture Col- lection of Algae and Protozoa (CCAP) strain 216/18 (94% identity), but very similar (99% identity) to C. glaronensis (a lichen endosymbiont) and green endophytes from the tree Ginkgo biloba. The CCAP strain 216/18 was a sister sequence to Nannochloris algae, far from the Coccomyxa clade. These results suggest a misidentification or outgrowth of the original CCAP strain 216/18 by a differ- ent 'Nannochloris-like' trebouxiophycean organism. In contrast, our sequences directly obtained from infested mussels could represent the true C. parasitica responsible for the green pustules in blue mussels.

38 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The study indicates that for Z. marina beds in Flensborg Fjord the effects of M. edulis in seagrass beds are primarily negative, and raises the question whether this leads to negative effects on the stability and expansion of Z.marina beds.
Abstract: The effect of blue mussel ( Mytilus edulis ) presence in eelgrass ( Zostera marina ) beds was studied from June 2004 to July 2005 in Flensborg fjord, Denmark. The field experiments were conducted at two stations, one with only Z. marina (Eelgrass station) present and one where M. edulis were present in the Z. marina beds (Mixed station). Zostera marina parameters were measured (growth of leaves, shoot density, leaf length, and nutrient content) in combination with epiphyte cover and sediment parameters (sulphate reduction rates, sediment nutrient fluxes, organic content, C, N and P content) to examine possible positive and negative effects of the mussels on eelgrass performance. The fluxes of ammonium from the sediments were stimulated at all sampling dates at the Mixed station, and possibly stimulated epiphyte growth at this station. Further 15 N signals in epiphytes from the Mixed station suggested that excretion products from the mussels were important nitrogen sources at this station. Sulphate reduction rates were enhanced at the Mixed station and also sediment sulphide concentrations increased under mussel influence, which may have resulted in sulphide toxicity and decreased growth of Z. marina at this station. The study indicates that for Z. marina beds in Flensborg Fjord the effects of M. edulis in seagrass beds are primarily negative, and raises the question whether this leads to negative effects on the stability and expansion of Z. marina beds.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The mussels seem to sense the pollutant they have been previously exposed to, and their acute response indicates physiological adaptation to the polluted environment.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The standardized random sampling methods and simple morphometric identification techniques described here can be used to test whether the frequency of invasive mussels changes over time and space in Puget Sound, suggesting no consistent barriers to gene flow between species.
Abstract: Mytilus galloprovincialis (Mg), the Mediterranean blue mussel, is sympatric with the native M. trossulus (Mt) throughout much of the north Pacific, likely as the result of human introduction. We investigated the distribution of the two species and their hybrids (Mgt) in Puget Sound, Washington, to determine whether differences occur in habitat preference between the two species and hybrids. In addition, we investigated whether there were consistent size and shape differences between the native and introduced mussels and hybrids. Measurements of over 6,000 mussels from 30 sites, of which 1,460 were genotyped for a species-specific genetic marker, revealed that Mg and Mgt can be found throughout Puget Sound. Mg and Mgt were larger and exhibited a greater height:length ratio than Mt. Frequencies of Mg and Mgt were higher in subtidal habitats, such as docks, than on intertidal rocks, walls or pilings. Within intertidal habitats, Mg and Mgt were more frequent than Mt in the lower reaches of the intertidal. At slightly more than half the sites the frequency of the three genotypes accorded with random mating expectations suggesting no consistent barriers to gene flow between species. The standardized random sampling methods and simple morphometric identification techniques described here can be used to test whether the frequency of invasive mussels changes over time and space in Puget Sound.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The blue mussel (Mytilus trossulus) was confirmed to be a very useful sentinel species to compare pollution level inside and outside the Gulf of Gdańsk, and it is recommended the use of other species to give a more detailed picture of the pollution situation in coastal areas.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The sediment biogeochemical conditions were altered, as the mussel biodeposits enhanced sulphate reduction rates and increased sulphide concentrations in the porewater, which may result in sulphide invasion and reduced growth of Z. marina.

Journal Article
TL;DR: The blue mussel Mytilus trossulus occurs in the Pacific and in the North Atlantic and six microsatellite loci were developed and characterized for Baltic M. trossulus, of which six were polymorphic and four of the six were successfully amplified.
Abstract: Natural stress and disturbances are important factors affecting the structure and function of ecosystems. However the magnitude of stress has escalated due to anthropogenic activities. Environmental monitoring and toxicity assessments try to protect ecosystems from unwanted human alterations. The aim of this Doctoral thesis was to increase the understanding of the complex effects that environmental stress has on individuals and invertebrate populations. The low saline environment in the Baltic Sea is perceived as stressful for most organisms living there. In Paper I, it was found that Baltic blue mussels living in the less saline northern Baltic Proper (~5 psu) had lower basal metabolism and were more susceptible to toxic exposure than the mussels in the south (~7 psu). There was no genetic differentiation between the mussels from the northern and southern areas while there were genetic differences between mussels from sites within the respective areas (Paper III), indicating that there is not a simple relationship between the health of the mussels and genetic diversity in the microsatellite loci studied. In Paper IV it was found that the heat tolerance of the intertidal dogwhelk Nucella lapillus is oxygen dependent. Increased oxygen levels resulted in higher survival rate. Protein expression profiles also became more similar to those of the controls, compared to the whelks exposed to high temperature and normal oxygen levels. In Paper V and VI it was found that exposure to a single toxicant for more than one generation decreased the genetic diversity in exposed copepod populations even though abundances remained unaltered. In Paper VI, exposure to naturally contaminated sediments, which contained of a mixture of toxicants, did not decrease genetic diversity. However the genetic divergence (FST) within the treatments was very high, probably due to small effective population sizes in the replicates. Likewise in Paper III, the very low blue mussel abundance in the north together with the stressful environment suggests a small effective population in the northern Baltic Proper. In conclusion, my studies show that, measuring effects on several levels, including both functional and structural endpoints will both increase the sensitivity of the tests and increase their ecological relevance.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The study provides an indication of the types of factors that may be invoked as causes of spatial variation in marginal blue mussel populations and reinforces the need to consider multiple aspects when distributional patterns are assessed.
Abstract: Physical and biological processes interact to produce pattern in nature. Pattern is scale dependent as processes generating pattern are heterogeneous in time and space. We tested some causes of variation in abundance and distribution of three marginal populations of sublittoral blue mussels, Mytilus edulis, in the non-tidal northeastern Baltic Sea. We studied the role of substrate inclination, perennial algae and siltation along local wave exposure gradients on mussel distribution over a regional salinity gradient. We found marked differences on regional scales (p < 0.001) with lower densities and biomasses of mussels with declining salinity. Along local gradients, mussel densities increased with increasing exposure (p < 0.001) and declining slope and sedimentation (p < 0.01). Site specifically, densities of blue mussels and the perennial red algae, Furcellaria lumbricalis, were positively related, results supported by a colonisation experiment. Also, young post-recruits showed significant relations to adult biomass, wave exposure, algal biomass, bottom slope and sediment cover. Findings showed that the relative importance of the determinants affecting blue mussels at the edge of their range vary with scale and are affected by the density and size structure of mussel populations. The study provides an indication of the types of factors that may be invoked as causes of spatial variation in marginal blue mussel populations and reinforces the need to consider multiple aspects when distributional patterns are assessed.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Overall, the results demonstrated that larval recruitment of M. edulis is an active process affected both by boundary-layer hydrodynamics and algal waterborne compounds.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The observed variations of an antioxidant response in relation to tidal oscillations could correspond to changes in the redox status of the mussels during tidal oscillation.
Abstract: Inducible antioxidant defences in marine organisms such as mussel bivalves are commonly used as biomarkers of pollutant-induced oxidative stress and their variations proposed as one of the biological effect measurements for assessment of contamination impact in aquatic environments. Among them, the copper/zinc superoxide dismutases (Cu/Zn-SODs) are metalloenzymes which play a key role in the protection of cells in case of oxidative stress. In order to observe possible variations of an antioxidant response in relation to tidal oscillations, the copper/zinc superoxide dismutase activity (Cu/Zn-SOD) was characterized in the digestive gland and gills of blue mussels sampled at high and low shore throughout the tidal cycle. Determination of SOD activity was performed on gels after isoelectro-focusing, allowing the revelation of three isoforms. In both tissues, high-shore mussels exhibited a higher level of total SOD activity than low-shore mussels. During emersion, a decrease of total SOD activity appeared in digestive gland for both groups. In high-shore mussels, the less acidic form contributed to 75% of the total activity, the second one to 20% and the more acidic one to 5% in both tissues before air exposure. During emersion, the relative contribution of the three isoforms to the total activity was markedly changed with a significant decrease in intensity of the first isoform and parallel increases in the two other ones. After re-immersion a progressive recovery of proportions of SOD isoforms was observed. In low-shore mussels, the relative contribution of the three isoforms to the total SOD activity showed similar changes. The observed variations could correspond to changes in the redox status of the mussels during tidal oscillations.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: During a combined research project at several stations along the Lower Saxony coast (German North Sea) antifouling biocides were analysed in water, sediment and biota, pathological changes of mussels, oysters and periwinkles in Norderney harbour were not found to be associated with parasitic infestation.
Abstract: During a combined research project at several stations along the Lower Saxony coast (German North Sea) antifouling biocides were analysed in water, sediment and biota. Pathological alterations in blue mussel, Pacific oyster and periwinkle found in the harbour of Norderney and a reference station are presented here and discussed on the background of chemical analyses. The molluscan species from the reference station Borkum East flat did not show any pathological effects in central organs, except those provoked by an infestation in the gastro-intestinal tract by the copepod Mytilicola intestinalis and trematode larvae. In most animals, the metacercaria were found in the interstitial tissue without any inflammatory reaction. In a minor number of specimens, an inflammatory reaction in the mucosa and sub-mucosa of the intestine occurred in association with Mytilicola infestation. These reactions may be evoked through mechanical irritation of the gut epithelium, metabolic products of the parasites or invading bacteria. In contrast to the observed pathological changes of mussels, oysters and periwinkles in Norderney harbour were not found to be associated with parasitic infestation. The most prominent pathological alterations were observed in the digestive system and in the gonad. In the gastro-intestinal tract inflammatory reactions, atrophy and necrosis of tubules in the mid gut gland were most pronounced in spring at the beginning of the pleasure boat season in the Pacific oyster and to a minor degree in the blue mussel and the periwinkle. The latter displayed additional inflammatory and necrotic processes in the gills. Especially in the gonad, an elevated resorption rate of gametes was present in the Pacific oyster and in the periwinkle. In addition, impact of organotin compounds was reflected in an intersex index of up to 1.4 in Littorina littorea in coincidence with masculinization of the reproductive organs.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the blue mussel Mytilus trossulus occurs in the Pacific and in the North Atlantic and six microsatellite loci were developed and characterized for Baltic M. edulis.
Abstract: The blue mussel Mytilus trossulus occurs in the Pacific and in the North Atlantic. We developed and characterized six microsatellite loci for Baltic M. trossulus. Seventeen microsatellite loci were screened, of which six were polymorphic. The number of alleles among 50 individuals ranged from 3 to 13 and the observed and expected heterozygosity were 0.09–0.46 and 0.34–0.86, respectively. The loci were also tested for cross amplification in M. edulis, in which four of the six microsatellite loci were successfully amplified.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Conditions of the sock environment such as crowding may be less important than macroenvironmental factors (e.g., current speed) in determining growth.
Abstract: Suspended mussel culture entails loading high densities of juvenile mussels into mesh socks, and hanging them from floating longlines, often resulting in intraspecific crowding, reduced growth, and mussel yield. Despite this potential bottleneck in culture, there are few data on behavioral mechanisms that regulate juvenile density and growth rate. A field experiment was conducted with culture socks to examine the effects of stocking density (High ∼800 mussels/30.5 cm; Low ∼400 mussels/30.5 cm), blue mussel species (Mytilus edulis and M. trossulus) and environment on early development of the culture population. In situ photography and direct sampling were used to generate time series of mussel size, valve gape, siphon area, shell orientation, and emergence in experimental socks at a commercial farm in Ship Harbour, Nova Scotia, Canada. Moored CTD-current meters and water sampling were used to characterize the sites. Emergence from the culture socks required 1–2 mo, with faster initial emergence in...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Denisenko et al. as mentioned in this paper found subtidal populations of Mytilus edulis in shallows to the southwest of Dolgij Island in the Barents Sea.
Abstract: Ornithological surveys conducted over the Pechora Sea (the southeastern part of the Barents Sea) in the 1990 s revealed huge non-nesting flocks of marine ducks, the largest in the European North. Especially dense waterfowl aggregations are constantly observed at the shallows near Dolgij Island during molting period and migration to wintering places. All the marine ducks flocking there are specialized benthos feeders predominantly consuming mussels Mytilus edulis. At the same time, numerous previous benthic studies in the Pechora Sea did not reveal mussels near Dolgij Island where benthic biomass was somewhat lower than in the adjacent areas (Denisenko in Mar Ecol Prog Ser 258:109–123. 2003) which left the food source for these abundant bird flocks enigmatic. In the course of an expedition in summer 2007 we found subtidal populations of M. edulis in shallows to the southwest of Dolgij Island. These populations were confined to a coastal zone and were characterized by a highly disjunct distribution with the biomass reaching up to 4 kg m−2. We describe these subtidal populations as well as an intertidal mussel population on the western shore of Dolgij Island.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results demonstrated a long-term human enteropathogen contamination of Irish waters with consequent public health risk-factors for drinking water abstraction and water-based recreational activities and provided further solid evidence that zebra mussels can recover and concentrate environmentally derived human pathogens and therefore can be used for the sanitary assessment of surface water quality.
Abstract: The zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) is an abundant and invasive molluscan shellfish species which arrived in Ireland’s river basins in the early 1990’s. Inland and coastal surface waters can be contaminated by human waterborne zoonotic enteropathogens such as Cryptosporidium parvum, Giardia lamblia, Encephalitozoon intestinalis, E. hellem and Enterocytozoon bieneusi originating predominantly from wastewater treatment plant effluents and agricultural runoff. Bivalve species, i.e., the invasive zebra mussel, Mytilus edulis (blue mussel) and Anodonta anatina (duck mussel) were used as sentinels and also as biomonitors of the aforementioned waterborne pathogens at twelve sites located in three Irish river basin districts impacted by pollution related to various water quality pressures. A variety of advanced biomolecular techniques were utilized to assess the presence and concentration of these pathogens in molluscan shellfish. At least one pathogen species was detected in bivalves at each of the twelve sites. Cryptosporidium, implicated in several recent Irish gastrointestinal epidemics, was recorded at all sites subjected to agricultural runoff and at one treated wastewater discharge site, linking source-track directly to animal and human fecal wastes. Overall, the results demonstrated a long-term human enteropathogen contamination of Irish waters with consequent public health risk-factors for drinking water abstraction and water-based recreational activities. The study provided further solid evidence that zebra mussels can recover and concentrate environmentally derived human pathogens and therefore can be used for the sanitary assessment of surface water quality.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Analysis of recent data confirmed that mussel larvae have preferred to settle in sites of present mussels beds and sites with bases of former mussel beds, and the presence of mussel bed structures is not obligatory for settlement, because sites without those structures were also re-settled by the spatfall in 1996.
Abstract: Field surveys (dating back to 1950) and aerial photograph series (dating back to 1966) were evaluated to determine sites of intertidal blue mussel (Mytilus edulis) beds at the Wadden Sea coast of Lower Saxony. Maps were prepared indicating sites of blue mussel beds during the last decades. A table gives additional information on the presence (or absence) of blue mussel beds at each site at the time of large-scale surveys. Altogether 187 sites of M. edulis beds were recorded in the investigation area. In spring 1996, there were still only 19 sites where mussel beds still occurred, although at 51 sites residual mussel-bed structures were present, e.g. shell bases of former beds or protruding patches (which had been occupied by M. edulis before the beds vanished) and open spaces. At that time, the majority of the sites contained neither mussel beds nor mussel-bed structures. The analysis of recent data confirmed that mussel larvae have preferred to settle in sites of present mussel beds and sites with bases of former mussel beds. There was no preferential selection of one of these categories (settled beds vs. shell bases). On the other hand, the presence of mussel beds or mussel bed structures is not obligatory for settlement, because sites without those structures were also re-settled by the spatfall in 1996, even though on a smaller scale.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The need to quantify larval supply at the species level to understand the relative importance of pre- and post-settlement mortality is reinforced, and the usefulness of the COI region as a species-specific marker for identifying mussel larvae and juveniles is demonstrated.

Patent
10 Dec 2008
TL;DR: In this paper, an artificial seedling method for hybrid mussels in factory, comprising the seedling steps as follows: parent clam selecting, parent clam reinforced cultivation, stimulating the production by drying in the shade and flowing water, selecting the spermatozoa of the male parent thick shell mussels and ovum of the female parent blue mussel, larval culture, juvenile culture, etc.
Abstract: The invention relates to an artificial seedling method for hybrid mussels in factory, comprising the seedling steps as follows: parent clam selecting, parent clam reinforced cultivation, stimulating the production by drying in the shade and flowing water, selecting the spermatozoa of the male parent thick shell mussels and ovum of the female parent blue mussel, larval culture, juvenile culture, etc. The hybrid seedling technique of the invention can successfully cultivate the healthy and high-quality hybrid juvenile mussels, provide the material condition for the property improvement of the mussels, meanwhile, the method of the invention lays the technical foundation for adding a new cultivation type for the seawater mussel cultivation in China and has important theoretical significance and wide application prospect.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An individual-based model is developed to describe the dynamics of mussels as controlled by Competition for Space and Food (CSF) availability, which consists of a physiological growth submodel based on Dynamic Energy Budget (DEB) concept and a competition submodel.