'The smell will knock you off your feet': mass mussel die-offs baffle scientists
Source: The Guardian
'The smell will knock you off your feet': mass mussel die-offs baffle scientists
Mussels, the backbone of the river ecosystem because they control silt levels and filter water, are facing a mysterious affliction
Emily Holden in Washington DC
Mon 14 Oct 2019 07.00 BST
Last modified on Mon 14 Oct 2019 14.46 BST
Each fall since 2016, wildlife biologist Jordan Richard has returned to the same portion of the Clinch River in Tennessee, braced for the worst tens of thousands of newly dead mussel shells gleaming from the surface of the water.
The mass die-off isnt recognizable at first. But once Richard sees the first freshwater mussel, which look quite different to their marine cousins of moules frite fame, he scans the river and finds another every five to 10 seconds.
The smell will knock you off your feet, Richard said. You see what was a healthy looking river, but now theres just dead bodies scattered everywhere.
Mussels are the backbone of the river ecosystem because they control silt levels and filter water. And they are facing a mysterious affliction in hotspots in the US and abroad.
Richard, who works for the US Fish and Wildlife Service, is part of a team investigating the bizarre declines in Tennessee and Virginia, as well as Oregon and Washington. The group includes biologists, pathologists and epidemiologists from the University of Wisconsin and the US Geological Survey. They say others are researching similar episodes in Spain.
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Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2019/oct/14/the-smell-will-knock-you-off-your-feet-mass-mussel-die-offs-baffle-scientists