Larval mussels (Family Unionidae) are obligate parasites on fish, and after excystment from their host, as juveniles, they are transported with flow. We know relatively little about the mechanisms that affect dispersal and subsequent settlement of juvenile mussels in large rivers. We used a three-dimensional hydrodynamic model of a reach of the Upper Mississippi River with stochastic Lagrangian particle tracking to simulate juvenile dispersal. Sensitivity analyses were used to determine the importance of excystment location in two-dimensional space (lateral and longitudinal) and to assess the effects of vertical location (depth in the water column) on dispersal distances and juvenile settling distributions. In our simulations, greater than ...
Unionoid mussels are considered keystone species due to their ability to modify and link pelagic, be...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73643/1/j.1365-2426.2003.01165.x.pd
Author Institution: Department of Zoology, Miami UniversityThe decline in freshwater mussels makes i...
Larval mussels (Family Unionidae) are obligate parasites on fish, and after excystment from their ho...
Larval mussels (Family Unionidae) are obligate parasites on fish, and after excystment from their ho...
We examined the dispersal of larvae (glochidia) of a common unionid mussel species, Actinonaias liga...
Abstract Organisms that live in flowing water need to compensate for downstream displacement. Mobile...
Unidirectional water flow results in the downstream-biased, asymmetric dispersal of many riverine or...
Unidirectional water flow results in the downstream-biased, asymmetric dispersal of many riverine or...
Freshwater mussels are among the most imperiled animals worldwide. These unionids tend to be most ab...
The larvae of freshwater mussels are obligate ectoparasites on fishes while adults are sedentary and...
Freshwater mussels (Unionida) dominate the biomass and are important keystone organisms in many riv...
Freshwater mussels (order Unionoida) are the most imperiled group of fauna in North America. The fac...
Abstract: The family Unionidae (freshwater mussels) is geographically diverse with species found wor...
In unionid mussels, it has been proposed that opportunistic life histories are adaptive in flashy tr...
Unionoid mussels are considered keystone species due to their ability to modify and link pelagic, be...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73643/1/j.1365-2426.2003.01165.x.pd
Author Institution: Department of Zoology, Miami UniversityThe decline in freshwater mussels makes i...
Larval mussels (Family Unionidae) are obligate parasites on fish, and after excystment from their ho...
Larval mussels (Family Unionidae) are obligate parasites on fish, and after excystment from their ho...
We examined the dispersal of larvae (glochidia) of a common unionid mussel species, Actinonaias liga...
Abstract Organisms that live in flowing water need to compensate for downstream displacement. Mobile...
Unidirectional water flow results in the downstream-biased, asymmetric dispersal of many riverine or...
Unidirectional water flow results in the downstream-biased, asymmetric dispersal of many riverine or...
Freshwater mussels are among the most imperiled animals worldwide. These unionids tend to be most ab...
The larvae of freshwater mussels are obligate ectoparasites on fishes while adults are sedentary and...
Freshwater mussels (Unionida) dominate the biomass and are important keystone organisms in many riv...
Freshwater mussels (order Unionoida) are the most imperiled group of fauna in North America. The fac...
Abstract: The family Unionidae (freshwater mussels) is geographically diverse with species found wor...
In unionid mussels, it has been proposed that opportunistic life histories are adaptive in flashy tr...
Unionoid mussels are considered keystone species due to their ability to modify and link pelagic, be...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73643/1/j.1365-2426.2003.01165.x.pd
Author Institution: Department of Zoology, Miami UniversityThe decline in freshwater mussels makes i...