Second Year Results of an Ongoing Survey of Metazoan Symbionts of Freshwater Mussels (Unionidae) from Kentucky Lake
George W. Benz; Stephen Curran
Tennessee Aquarium, Chattanooga, TN; Department of Ecology and Evolutional
Biology, The University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT
The freshwater mussel family Unionidae is represented by at least 269
recent species in the Southeast. Throughout southeastern states the harvest of unionids for raw
shell used in the cultured pearl industry represents at least a 25 million dollar per year
enterprise. Unfortunately, over the past several decades many factors have contributed to imperil
many mussel species and today at least 71% of the North American unionid fauna is considered
endangered, threatened, or otherwise in need of special concern. Efforts to save this valuable
natural resource have included studies aimed at gathering life history information needed to best
manage mussels as well as research to evaluate the use of aquaculture to propagate mussels for
reintroduction. As part of these studies, the Tennessee Aquarium and University of Connecticut
have collaborated with the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency to investigate the metazoan
symbiont fauna of mussels living in Kentucky Lake.
As of the fall of 1995, a total of 346 unionid mussels comprising eight
species have been examined for metazoan symbionts. Mussels were collected between the 87.4 and
197.6 mile markers of the Tennessee River between May 1994 and June 1995. A total of 1685
metazoan symbionts representing six phyla, 12 families, and at least 13 genera and species were
identified from sampled mussels. Free-living commensals accounted for only 9.3% of all collected
symbionts and were represented by nematodes, insects, an annelid and a tartigrade. Parasite taxa
belonging to the Aspidogasteridae and Unionicolidae accounted for over 99% of all collected
parasites, and only two members of these families achieved prevalence values greater than 10%.
Occurrences of the three major symbiotic taxa (unionicolids, aspidogastrids, and dorylaimids)
were statistically determined to be unrelated events even though individual mussels were found to
be inhabited by varying combinations of up to all three of these taxa. The platyhelminth
Aspidogaster conchicola exhibited an over-dispersed distribution within one sample of
Quadrula quadrula, while the mite Unionicola vikira exhibited a random distribution
within the same sample. Preliminary results of this study along with those of previous
researchers suggest that unionids appear to be insulted by a relatively impoverished metazoan
parasite fauna (regarding number of parasite species) as compared to other host taxa of similar
species richness. The evolutionary and ecological implications of this could be significant and
are worth pursuing via continued research.
*This project represents work completed to date under Tennessee Wildlife Resources
Agency contract No. 7A-4-l 1062-4-00. Copies of annual project reports are available upon request
from: G.W. Benz, Tennessee Aquarium, One Broad St., P.O. Box 11048, Chattanooga, TN 37401.