Habitat aging and degradation in terrestrialized floodplains: a need to rejuvenate processes for sustaining freshwater mussel populations

Author:

Nagayama Shigeya1ORCID,Harada Morihiro1ORCID,Negishi Junjiro N.2ORCID,Kitamura Jyun‐ichi3,Mori Terutaka4ORCID,Mori Seiichi5

Affiliation:

1. Regional Adaptation Research Center Gifu University 1‐1, Yanagido Gifu Gifu 501‐1193 Japan

2. Faculty of Environmental Earth Science Hokkaido University N10 W5 Sapporo Hokkaido 060‐0810 Japan

3. Mie Prefectural Museum 3060 Isshinden‐koudubeta Tsu Mie 514‐0061 Japan

4. Aqua Restoration Research Center Public Works Research Institute Kawashimakasada Kakamigahara Gifu 501‐6021 Japan

5. Gifu‐Kyoritsu University 5–50, Kitakata Ogaki Gifu 503‐8550 Japan

Abstract

Progressive floodplain terrestrialization leads to the deterioration of floodplain ecosystems. Although the importance of hydrological connectivity between floodplain habitats and river channels for floodplain‐dependent organisms has been emphasized, less attention has been paid to the temporal relationship between habitat degradation and aquatic organisms. In this study, we examined temporal changes in mussel population structures and the hydrological connectivity of pond‐like floodplain water bodies (FWBs) in the terrestrialized floodplains of a lowland river in Japan. We tested the hypothesis that FWB habitats for mussels degrade over time, while newly formed FWBs contribute to providing recruitment sites for mussels. The habitat age for 53 FWBs was determined as of 2018, using historical aerial photographs. Inundation frequency, mussel abundance, and size structures (shell length) were also investigated in the FWBs in 2007 and 2018. Mussel abundance decreased with FWB aging (6–36 years), which coincided with a decrease in inundation frequency. In most existing FWBs, mussel abundance in all size classes decreased over the decade (2007–2018). In contrast, small individuals occurred in the newly formed FWBs at age 6, and in the existing FWBs where inundation frequency slightly increased over the decade (2007–2018), such FWBs were rare. In conclusion, the “young” and “rejuvenated” FWBs were found to be critically important for the recruitment and persistence of mussel populations. This suggests that the floodplain management strategy of “cyclic floodplain rejuvenation” could be applicable for mussel conservation in terrestrialized floodplains of lowland rivers.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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