Marine Mussels. Elizabeth Gosling

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Marine Mussels - Elizabeth Gosling

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Mytella charruana, is an epifaunal tropical (6–36 °C; Brodsky et al. 2009) and subtropical mussel. Its indigenous habitat is typically shallow lagoons and mudflats in bays, where it reaches high densities (de Oliveira et al. 2005 and references therein). Mussels are found tightly attached to a variety of naturally submerged and intertidal substrates, such as muddy sand, rocks, oyster shells, water intake pipes, wood pilings, driftwood floating docks and boat hulls. Juvenile and adult individuals are euryhaline, surviving at a wide range of salinities (2–40 psu; Yuan et al. 2010) at 20 °C, although the salinity tolerance range narrows as the temperature decreases or increases (Yuan et al. 2016b). Mytella guyanensis is a widespread euryhaline bivalve that occurs half‐buried in the intertidal zone of mangroves and estuaries from Baja California, Mexico to Santa Catarina, Brazil (de Oliveira et al. 2005).

      Temperature and salinity not only set limits on the spatial distribution of bivalves but also affect every aspect of biology, including feeding, reproduction, growth, respiration, osmoregulation and parasite‐disease interactions (see details in Chapters 4, 5, 6, 7, 11 and 12). When it comes to distribution on a large geographic scale, it is generally recognised that temperature plays a more important role than salinity. The synergistic effect of temperature and salinity, acting in concert with other environmental variables such as water depth, substrate type, wave action, food availability, water turbidity and the occurrence of competitors, predators and disease, can have more profound consequences than either factor acting alone. Geographical distribution is also governed by hydrographic barriers to larval dispersal, such as oceanic currents, confluences, gyres and surface water stratification.

      Temperature, Salinity and Hydrographic Factors

      Most marine bivalves live within a temperature range from −3 to 44°C (Vernberg & Vernberg 1972). Within this range, the degree of temperature tolerance is species‐specific, and within individual species early embryos and larva have a narrower temperature tolerance than adults (see Chapter 5). In addition, the temperature required for spawning is invariably higher than the minimum temperature required for growth. All of these factors set limits on the natural distribution of individual species on both regional and local scales. A few relevant examples from marine mussels will elucidate this.

      Beside rising air and water temperatures, global climate change may also entail increases

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