Aim North America harbours the most diverse freshwater mussel fauna on Earth. This fauna has high endemism at the continental scale and within individual river systems. Previous faunal classifications for North America were based on intuitive, subjective assessments of species distributions, primarily the occurrence of endemic species, and do not portray continent-wide patterns of faunal similarity. The aim of this study is to provide an analytical portrayal of patterns of mussel diversity in a hierarchical framework that informs the biogeographical history of the fauna. Location The study considered the mussel fauna of North America from the Rio Grande system northwards. Methods Patterns of mussel faunal similarity in 126 river systems or ...
Freshwater mussels occur in a variety of aquatic ecosystems worldwide but nowhere is mussel species ...
Freshwater mussels occur in a variety of aquatic ecosystems worldwide but nowhere is mussel species ...
The availability of freshwater to meet human and natural ecosystem needs remains the ultimate challe...
Freshwater mussels (Bivalvia: Unionoida) are interesting because of their unique life cycles, global...
Freshwater mussel species are in global decline. Anthropogenic changes of river channels and the dec...
Out of the 300 genera of freshwater mussels (Family: Unionidae) represented in North America, most s...
Natural history collections are uniquely positioned to chronicle biodiversity changes across time an...
Natural history collections are uniquely positioned to chronicle biodiversity changes across time an...
Freshwater mussels (family Unionidae) are among the world's most endangered taxa, with almost 75% of...
Based on its native distribution and temperature constraints, the invasive zebra mussel (Dreissena p...
We investigate population genetic structuring in Margaritifera falcata, a freshwater mussel native t...
The European population of Greater Scaup Aythya marila has experienced an alarming, ~60 % decline in...
Freshwater mussels occur in a variety of aquatic ecosystems worldwide but nowhere is mussel species ...
Freshwater burrowing mussels (unionids) play a vital role in freshwater ecosystems through nutrient ...
Natural history collections are uniquely positioned to chronicle biodiversity changes across time an...
Freshwater mussels occur in a variety of aquatic ecosystems worldwide but nowhere is mussel species ...
Freshwater mussels occur in a variety of aquatic ecosystems worldwide but nowhere is mussel species ...
The availability of freshwater to meet human and natural ecosystem needs remains the ultimate challe...
Freshwater mussels (Bivalvia: Unionoida) are interesting because of their unique life cycles, global...
Freshwater mussel species are in global decline. Anthropogenic changes of river channels and the dec...
Out of the 300 genera of freshwater mussels (Family: Unionidae) represented in North America, most s...
Natural history collections are uniquely positioned to chronicle biodiversity changes across time an...
Natural history collections are uniquely positioned to chronicle biodiversity changes across time an...
Freshwater mussels (family Unionidae) are among the world's most endangered taxa, with almost 75% of...
Based on its native distribution and temperature constraints, the invasive zebra mussel (Dreissena p...
We investigate population genetic structuring in Margaritifera falcata, a freshwater mussel native t...
The European population of Greater Scaup Aythya marila has experienced an alarming, ~60 % decline in...
Freshwater mussels occur in a variety of aquatic ecosystems worldwide but nowhere is mussel species ...
Freshwater burrowing mussels (unionids) play a vital role in freshwater ecosystems through nutrient ...
Natural history collections are uniquely positioned to chronicle biodiversity changes across time an...
Freshwater mussels occur in a variety of aquatic ecosystems worldwide but nowhere is mussel species ...
Freshwater mussels occur in a variety of aquatic ecosystems worldwide but nowhere is mussel species ...
The availability of freshwater to meet human and natural ecosystem needs remains the ultimate challe...