EARLY HEARING DETECTION AND INTERVENTION VIRTUAL CONFERENCE
MARCH 2-5, 2021

(Virtually the same conference, without elevators, airplane tickets, or hotel room keys)

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5/22/2018  |   11:30 AM - 11:45 AM   |  DO FRESHWATER MUSSELS INFLUENCE THE ABUNDANCE OF MACROINVERTEBRATE FUNCTIONAL FEEDING GROUPS?   |  420 A

DO FRESHWATER MUSSELS INFLUENCE THE ABUNDANCE OF MACROINVERTEBRATE FUNCTIONAL FEEDING GROUPS?

Freshwater mussels are ecosystem engineers that occur as multi-species aggregations (mussel beds) that are patchily distributed in streams. Mussels alter physical habitat structure, act as nutrient capacitors, and their filter feeding can alter seston concentrations and composition in the water overlying them. We hypothesized that freshwater mussels, by altering food resource availability, would influence the abundance of different macroinvertebrate functional feeding groups. To test this hypothesis, we performed a field experiment in a small river in southeastern Oklahoma, the Kiamichi River. We used 50, 0.25m2 enclosures which were buried 20 cm deep in the sediment. Treatments were mussels (2 species combined, Actinonaias ligamentina and Amblema plicata; n=20), sham mussels (shells filled with sand; n = 20), and a sediment only control (n=10). Macroinvertebrates were collected after 12 weeks, identified, and measured. Preliminary results show decreased relative abundance of grazing mayflies (Heptageniidae) and increased abundance of predatory caddisflies (Polycentropidae Polycentropus spp.) in treatments with live mussels compared to controls, but few differences between treatments with live mussels compared to sham shells. These results indicate that the biogenic structure provided by mussels might facilitate predators.

  • Invertebrate
  • Mussel
  • Food Webs

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Presenters/Authors

Traci DuBose (), University of Oklahoma, tracipopejoy@ou.edu;


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Garrett Hopper (), Kansas State University, ghopper@ksu.edu;


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Caryn Vaughn (), University of Oklahoma, cvaughn@ou.edu;


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Keith Gido (), Kansas State University, kgido@ksu.edu;


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